Description The French Traveler -- Letters to Ch re Madame Adventure, Exploration & Indian Life In Eighteenth-Century Canada The First English Translation of The 1768 Bestseller Le Voyageur Fran aisTranslation and Commentary by William D.
Gairdner, Ph DFrom the very first page, readers are thrown into scenes of gigantic, crushing ice monsters in the high arctic, dangerous exploration among hardy and curious Eskimos, then the rough and tumble lives of the colonists of Newfoundland and Nova Scotia; and finally, deep into the fascinating customs, war, killing, loving, torturing, hunting, and exotic ways of the Huron and Iroquois Indians of Le Canada.
This is the first English translation of the best-selling 18th-century travel book Le Voyageur Fran ais (The French Traveler), which sold out repeatedly and remained in demand for more than a half-century.
The aim of its author, Joseph Delaporte, was to satisfy the insatiable curiosity of Europeans deeply fascinated by the adventure, mystery, and romantic appeal of the New World and its inhabitants.
What is Canada Like? Who are the strange Indian people living there? Are they like us? Were we once like them?The French Traveler supplied the answers for curious readers young and old, in this intimately detailed and fascinating blend of action and emotion.