romstadtjoseph19

Joseph Romstadt Romstadt من عند Rajanagar, Odisha 754029، الهند من عند Rajanagar, Odisha 754029، الهند

قارئ Joseph Romstadt Romstadt من عند Rajanagar, Odisha 754029، الهند

Joseph Romstadt Romstadt من عند Rajanagar, Odisha 754029، الهند

romstadtjoseph19

Sorry, I know this is considered a masterwork amongst the "Brown-rice-and-red-wine" set, but at the risk of sounding like an anti-academic ham n' egger, I always thought Sartre was a cockeyed old pervert. I'll stick to Camus or Celine on the rare occasion I need a blast of old-fashioned Euro-sulk.

romstadtjoseph19

Enjoyed the book and enjoying the series, but oh my gosh could I care any less about Davy and Dora? Davy is like the Cousin Oliver of Avonlea. I'm half-scared he'll stay a prominent character throughout the series.

romstadtjoseph19

This book is one of the Dear Canada series, which are historical novels, written in diary format, about fictional girls during different periods of Canadian history. After their father dies of smallpox in the winter of 1666, thirteen-year-old Helene St. Onge and her older sister, sixteen-year-old Catherine, are left all alone in the world, their mother having died when Helene was a baby. Catherine decides they will leave France to make a new life in the New World. New France is mostly populated by men, and women are needed for their wives. Catherine will marry a settler, and Helene will help in her household until she is old enough to marry. But things do not go as planned. Catherine dies during the long sea voyage, and Helene finds herself arriving in New France, all alone in a strange new land. Can Helene build a new life for herself in this new world? I really enjoyed this book in the Dear Canada series. I love reading about colonial times, so I really enjoyed the setting of Montreal in 1666. Helene was an appealing narrator and I loved reading her "diary" of all that happened to her. I would definitely recommend this book to readers who enjoyed other books in this series, or who like other historical diary fiction series, such as Dear America and the Royal Diaries.