WINNER OF THE LIBRIS AWARD -- FICTION BOOK OF THE YEAR
In the wilds of seventeenth-century North America, the lives of a Jesuit
missionary, a young Iroquois girl, and a great warrior and elder
statesman of the Huron Nation become entwined.
The Huron have battled the Iroquois for generations, but now both tribes
face a new, more dangerous threat from another land. Uneasy alliances
are made and unmade, cultures and beliefs clash in the face of
precipitous change, and not everyone will survive the march of history.
Joseph Boyden's magisterial novel tells this story of blood and hope,
suspicion and trust, hatred and love: a saga nearly four hundred years
old--and now a timeless work of literature.