Indian summer, 1607. Intrepid explorer and map-maker Samuel de Champlain
has founded a new and precarious settlement in Annapolis Royal, New
France (present-day Nova Scotia). As winter looms, two threats emerge:
boredom amongst the men and the deadly sickness scurvy. Champlain hits
upon the idea of a moveable feast -- an order of "good cheer" -- where
nobles and men can enjoy good local food, excellent wine, and
camaraderie.
Separated by the breadth of a continent and exactly four hundred years
is twenty-first-century blue-collar worker Andy Winslow and his friends,
whose urban landscape is threatened by encroaching environmental and
economic disaster. In alternating narratives, award winning author and
master storyteller Bill Gaston bridges the divide across land and time
in this illuminating story about survival, love, friendship, and feast.