**A new edition of the classic novel by Douglas LePan.** Returned from the ravages of war, met with a city that offers him only despair, a young man finds himself caught between two opposed worlds — the ordered but empty everyday life of "schedules and obligations," and the hellish chaos of the
The Deserter
✍ Scribed by Almond, Paul
- Book ID
- 106991364
- Publisher
- McArthur & Company Publishing Limited
- Year
- 2010
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 207 KB
- Series
- Alford Saga 1
- Category
- Fiction
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
✦ Synopsis
Imagine youíre in a swaying hammock on a British man-oíwar around 1800, riding out a harsh spring storm in a deserted estuary. Behind those high red cliffs lie a hundred miles of uncharted wilderness, populated only by indigenous peoples. If you jump ship and are caught, you will be branded a deserter ó subject to death by one thousand lashes. Within minutes, the ice-strewn waters will freeze your body and claim your soul. Even if this were your one chance for a life in the New World, would you jump? Thomas Manning did, and his leap into uncertainty begins the epic tale of a pioneer family, one of the many who built our great nation. Through his and his descendantsí eyes, we watch one small communityís impact on the great events which swirl about them and bring conflicts they must face in their struggles to create homes and families. Absorbing, touching and full of adventure, THE DESERTER is Book One of the Alford saga, a series chronicling two hundred years of Canadian...
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Imagine youíre in a swaying hammock on a British man-oíwar around 1800, riding out a harsh spring storm in a deserted estuary. Behind those high red cliffs lie a hundred miles of uncharted wilderness, populated only by indigenous peoples. If you jump ship and are caught, you will be branded a desert
Imagine youíre in a swaying hammock on a British man-oíwar around 1800, riding out a harsh spring storm in a deserted estuary. Behind those high red cliffs lie a hundred miles of uncharted wilderness, populated only by indigenous peoples. If you jump ship and are caught, you will be branded a desert
Imagine youíre in a swaying hammock on a British man-oíwar around 1800, riding out a harsh spring storm in a deserted estuary. Behind those high red cliffs lie a hundred miles of uncharted wilderness, populated only by indigenous peoples. If you jump ship and are caught, you will be branded a desert