Read Dawn on a Distant Shore Online
Authors: Sara Donati
Tags: #Canada, #Canada - History - 1791-1841, #Historical, #Action & Adventure, #Fiction, #Romance, #Indians of North America, #Suspense, #Historical Fiction, #English Fiction, #New York (State) - History - 1775-1865, #New York (State), #Indians of North America - New York (State)
Dawn on a Distant Shore | |
Into the Wilderness [2] | |
Sara Donati | |
Random House Digital, Inc. (2000) | |
Rating: | ***** |
Tags: | Canada, Canada - History - 1791-1841, Historical, Action & Adventure, Fiction, Romance, Indians of North America, Suspense, Historical Fiction, English Fiction, New York (State) - History - 1775-1865, New York (State), Indians of North America - New York (State) |
In an icy, untamed world of pristine beauty, a husband and wife are torn apart by fate but reunited forever by a love that can't be broken....An unforgettable love comes alive in this masterful epic of passion, treachery, and adventure....Award-winning author Sara Donati's debut novel, Into the Wilderness, was hailed as "one of those rare stories that let you breathe the air of another time" (Diana Gabaldon). Now, in an eloquent blend of fact and fiction, Donati re-creates her beloved characters from Into the Wilderness in an enthralling new tale of romance and adventure.Elizabeth and Nathaniel Bonner have settled into their life together at the edge of the New-York wilderness in the winter of 1794. But soon after Elizabeth gives birth to healthy twins, Nathaniel learns that his father has been arrested in British Canada. Forced to leave Hidden Wolf Mountain to help his father in Montreal, Nathaniel himself is imprisoned and in danger of being hanged as a spy. In a desperate bid to save her husband, Elizabeth bundles her infants and sets out through the snowy wilderness and across treacherous waterways on the dangerous trek to Canada. But she soon discovers that freeing her husband will take every ounce of her courage and inventiveness — and will threaten her with the loss of what she loves most: her children. Torn apart, the Bonners must embark on yet another perilous voyage, this time all the way across the ocean to the heart of Scotland, where a destiny they could never have imagined awaits them....
Dawn on a Distant
Shore
by
Sara Donati
Where they
are first encountered
On the edge
of the New-York wilderness
PRAISE FOR SARA
DONATI'S
CAPTIVATING
EPIC
INTO THE
WILDERNESS
"The author
builds a powerful adventure story, animating everyone--German villagers, slaves
and Scottish trappers alike--in a gorgeous, vividly described American landscape."--People
"One of those
rare stories that let you breathe the air of another time, and leave your
footprints on the snow of a wild, strange place. I can think of no better
adventure than to explore the wilderness in the company of such engaging and independent
lovers as Elizabeth and her Nathaniel."--Diana Gabaldon
SARA DONATI lives with
her husband and daughter in the Pacific Northwest, where she is working on her
next novel.
Jacket
illustration
(copyright)
Daniel Craig
Jacket design by
Yook Louie
Bantam Books by
Sara Donati
INTO THE WILDERNESS
DAWN ON A DISTANT
SHORE
For my daughter,
Elisabeth
She discovered
with great delight that
one does not love
one's children just because
they are
one's children
but because of
the friendship formed
while
raising them.
--Gabriel García Marquez
Just after I began
writing this novel, we moved across the country. My sincere thanks to old
friends who didn't lose sight of me or my characters, and to new friends--in
particular, Suzanne Paola, Bruce Beasley, and Robin Hemley--for spending so
much of their time with me on the high seas of historical fiction. I am
especially grateful to Suzanne, Bruce, and Jin Woo for their support and
friendship in interesting times. I truly don't know what we would do without
them, and I hope we never have to find out.
I owe a special debt
of gratitude to He-Who-Must-Remain Anonymous, the editor of the Baronage
website (www.baronage.com/.co.com.uk), whose expertise and generosity made many
things possible. The blueprints of Carryckcastle came from him; he discovered
the earl's genealogy and unearthed his coat of arms. Without the help of
Anonymous and his staff (most particularly, Brother Septimus and his nose for scandal),
my Alasdair Scott, fourth Earl of Carryck, would be a mere shadow of himself.
At most I am an
armchair sailor, and so in the writing of this story I depended greatly on the
help of those who love the sea: Ric Day, James Doody, Steven L. Lopata, John
Woram, and Ray Briscoe shared their expertise and experience, and I am thankful
to them. I married into a sailing family, and I thank my husband, Bill, and my parents-in-law,
Ken and Mary, for background information and, most of all, encouragement.
Another anonymous
friend was of great help in my attempts to render eighteenth-century Scots into
an accessible form. Accuracy must be the first casualty in such an endeavor,
for which I take full responsibility.
I am indebted to
Michelle LaFrance for close readings, supportive words, Gaelic translations,
and perspective; George Bray III for extensive help on eighteenth-century
military history, dress, and customs; Hakim Ibrahim Chishti for invaluable
detail on Islamic medical practices, naming conventions, history, and theology;
Dr. Jim Gilsdorf for background on specific illnesses and their surgical treatment;
Dr. Ellen Mandell for medical history, convincing detail, and photocopies; and
Mac Beckett, Jo Bourne, Rob Carr, Leigh Cooper, Lisa Dillon, Walter Hawn, Nurmi
Husa, Susan Leigh, Rosina Lippi, Susan Martin, Sandra Parshall, Susan Lynn Peterson,
Stephen Ratterman, Beth Shope, Elise Skidmore, Jack Turley, Arnold Wagner,
Karen Watson, and Michael Lee West. Thanks to another obsessive (obsessed?)
writer of historical fiction, Mr. Calwaugh, for dessert, garden tours, and
rounding up half Portland for readings.
The Women of the
Wilderness at AOL have been consistently supportive. Many times when I was having
trouble putting one word after the next they kept me going. Maria, Pokey,
Tracey, Lynn, Nancy, Jeanette, Melinda, Liz, Justine, Kit, Sue, Tara, Julie,
Sharon, Theresa, Rose Mary, Barb, Christy, Chris, Lee, Mary Rose, Kim Elaine,
Susan, Jenni, Michelle, Judy, Ann, Kathleen, and the Kathies--these generous
and supportive women have been a great source of energy and inspiration for me,
and I hope they find this novel worth the wait.
About four chapters
into this undertaking I asked Diana Gabaldon if the second volume in a series
is the hardest, to which she immediately shot back, "No, the fifth one
is." My thanks to Diana for perspective, for worry-stones and phone calls,
and for her friendship and support in an endeavor that never gets easier.
My continued thanks to
Jill Grinberg, my friend and agent and ever the voice of calm in the storm; and
to Wendy McCurdy, Nita Taublib, and Irwyn Applebaum at Bantam for their
continued enthusiasm and for invigorating phone calls.
Tamar Groffman has
gotten me and mine through many a rough spot with sound good words and dahlias,
for which I will always be thankful. Now if she would only adopt me.
I am ever thankful for
my daughter, Elisabeth, who is learning to cope with a Mother Who Writes
without losing her sense of humor, and to Bill, who refuses to be surprised by
any of this. Without them, the whole business would be no fun at all.
Judge Alfred
Middleton, landowner
Curiosity Freeman, a
freed slave, his housekeeper
Galileo Freeman, a
freed slave, the manager of his farm and holdings, and Curiosity's husband
Axel Metzler, owner of
the tavern
Nathaniel Bonner (also
known as Wolf-Running-Fast or Between-Two-Lives), a hunter and trapper
Elizabeth Middleton
Bonner (also known as Bone-in-Her-Back), a schoolteacher and Nathaniel's wife
Hannah (also known as
Squirrel), Nathaniel's daughter by his first wife
Mathilde (lily) and
Daniel Bonner, Elizabeth and Nathaniel's children
Liam Kirby, an orphan
living with the Bonners
Falling-Day, of the
Kahnyen'kehâka (mohawk) Wolf clan, Nathaniel's former mother-in-law
Many-Doves, Falling-Day's
daughter and the wife of Runs-from-Bears
Runs-from-Bears, of
the Kahnyen'kehâka Turtle clan
Blue-Jay, infant son
of Many-Doves and Runs-from-Bears
General Major Phillip
Schuyler and his wife, Catherine; some of their children and grandchildren
Augusta Merriweather,
Lady Crofton, Elizabeth Bonner's aunt, visiting from England along with her
daughter, Amanda Spencer, Lady Durbeyfield, with her husband, William Spencer,
Viscount Durbeyfield
Grievous Mudge, ship's
captain
Dan'l Bonner (known
also as Hawkeye), Nathaniel's father
Robbie MacLachlan,
Scot, hunter and trapper
Iona Fraser, a
Scottish immigrant to Canada and Luke, her grandson
Otter, son of
Falling-Day
Pépin, a pig farmer
Denier, a butcher
Ron Jones, a sergeant
of the dragoons
Angus Moncrieff,
secretary and factor to the Earl of Carryck
George Somerville,
Lord Bainbridge, lieutenant governor of Lower Canada, also called Pink George
Giselle Somerville,
daughter of Lord Bainbridge
Sir Guy Carleton, Lord
Dorchester, governor of Lower Canada
Maria Carleton, Lady
Dorchester, the governor's wife