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Flinty romantic drama set on the unforgiving prairies of Canada where only the strong survive. Charley Leland is a wheat farmer from Western Canada near Winnipeg who at the start of the story is paying a visit to the old country, genteel England, where he falls in love. Charley isn't as wise as the landed gentry he stays with, but he makes up for it with determination and sheer physical vigour. As someone says of him, "I fancy anyone who roused him would see the devil." The lady of his affections is Carrie Denham, who is effectively sold to him by her aristocratic yet impoverished English…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
Flinty romantic drama set on the unforgiving prairies of Canada where only the strong survive. Charley Leland is a wheat farmer from Western Canada near Winnipeg who at the start of the story is paying a visit to the old country, genteel England, where he falls in love. Charley isn't as wise as the landed gentry he stays with, but he makes up for it with determination and sheer physical vigour. As someone says of him, "I fancy anyone who roused him would see the devil." The lady of his affections is Carrie Denham, who is effectively sold to him by her aristocratic yet impoverished English family, although she's no shrinking violet, which becomes increasingly clearer as the story progresses. The mercantile nature of the marriage makes her hostile towards him at first. He takes his frustrations out on rustlers and by sowing a bumper crop even as wheat prices drop. The scene moves to his farm in Canada and about half way through a more refined suitor from England unexpectedly arrives on the prairie, threatening to undermine Carrie's growing respect for her husband, although it also gives her an opportunity to compare and contrast the two men. I've read and reviewed one novel by Bindloss before, a well written but hideously racist novel set in Africa called The League of the Leopard. Due to a sense of any characters of colour, this novel was simply well written without the racism. Charley is a simple yet admirable hero, Carrie more than a match for him. Of course she bends to his indefatigable will in the end, but she gives as good as she gets. Their romance is unusually frosty for the most part, I liked it though. Bindloss must have known the Canadian prairie because he describes it so magnificently. Carrie's thoughts on her husband pretty much sums up the tone of it all: 'Her husband's code was simple, and, perhaps, crude, but it was, at least, inflexible. After all, honour and duty are things well within the comprehension of very simple men. Indeed, it is often the case that, where principles are concerned, the simplest men have the clearest vision.' (Perry Whitford)
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Autorenporträt
Harold Edward Bindloss was an English novelist who published a number of adventure tales set in western Canada, as well as in England and West Africa. His writing was mostly based on his own experiences as a seaman, dock worker, farmer, and planter. Bindloss was born on April 6, 1866 in Wavertree, Liverpool, England. The eldest son of Edward Williams Bindloss, an iron dealer who employed six men at the time of the 1881 census. Bindloss has three sisters and four brothers. He spent several years at sea and in several colonies, most notably in Africa, before, returning to England in 1896, his health ravaged by malaria. He appears to have started out as a clerk in a shipping office, but this did not suit his adventurous nature, and he later became a farmer in Canada, a sailor, a dock worker, and a planter. He returned to England in 1896, likely from West Africa, afflicted with malaria. Given that he spent more than a decade at sea and in the colonies, it is likely that his time overseas was divided into two parts: first as a youth, and then as a young man, after, 1891.