Roberts, Kenneth. Arundel. Doubleday and Company, 1933.
Reason read: Maine became a state in the month of March.
Steven Nason, a boy from Arundel, Maine, opens his story with the announcement that he wants to set the record straight. He looks back his childhood in 1759 when Steven is only twelve years old. His childhood sweetheart, Mary Mallison, has just been kidnapped and her father murdered. Steven’s father suspects it is the work of Henri Guerlac de Sabrevois, a Frenchman hiding out in Quebec. Calling upon the Abenaki nation for help, Steven and his father set out to rescue the fair maiden Mary. The mission takes years and Steven’s life takes many twists and turns as he and his companions get caught up in the American Revolution. As a historical fiction writer, Kenneth Roberts weaves in events so real they seem to jump off the page. I particularly enjoyed Steven’s loyalty to his friends and the fact that he had a pet seal named Eunice.
Maine towns: Arundel, Brunswick, Falmouth, Kittery, Portland, Wells, and York. I was wondering if Monhegan would make a mention and it does on page 68.
Line I liked, “I growled a little, as Maine folk do when not wishful of answering…” (p 378).
Author fact: Roberts also wrote Northwest Passage which is on my Challenge list.
Book trivia: Arundel is book one of a four-part series. I am not reading any of the other books. Incidentally, my copy of Arundel boasts an extensive list of printings starting with the first publication on November 18th, 1929 all the way through September of 1956.
Music: While I didn’t expect any music in Arundel I was pleasantly proven wrong. “Viva la Canadienne,” “”Lillibullero,” “Benny Wentworth,” “Hot Stuff,” “Yankee Doodle,”
BookLust Twist: from More Book Lust in the chapter called “Digging Up the Past Through Fiction” (p 79). Arundel is also listed in the index of Book Lust To Go int he chapter called “The Maine Chance” (p 135).