Claire's future should be simple and predictable and include all the
normal expectations of a young Acadian woman. But her life is far from
straightforward. Her mother's mental illness is a blot on the family
name and Claire feels the brunt of it keenly. Her father, long sickened
by his wife's behavior, barely finds the energy to fend for his
ever-growing family. Claire's brother, Jacques, is increasingly angry
and suspicious of the British soldiers who seem to take an unnatural
interest in the family's daily routine. Grandmère, well she is
Grandmère - always hard to please, never capable of a single word of
praise, no matter how hard Claire works to provide for all of them.
And then there is Sam Douglass, handsome in his red coat and always
paying attention to her. What danger does she court just by talking to
him? Somehow Claire must make sense of it all before her home in
Grand-Pré is changed forever. There are traitors about but who are they?
Is Sam one? Is Jacques? Most terrifying of all, is she?
Lynne Kositsky paints a vivid portrait of the land, the Acadians, and a
tragic chapter in history. Claire by Moonlight traces the journey of
one girl, facing insurmountable odds, who will forever remain haunted by
the ghosts of those she loved.