Synopses & Reviews
Distinguished by Francis Parkmans pictorial style, The Jesuits in North America opens with the arrival of French missionaries in Canada in 1632. The stage is set for the aggravation of old rivalries between the Huron and the Iroquois Indians. The Jesuits try to ensure the loyalty of the Hurons, suppliers of fur to the French, but find them resistant to religious conversion. The Iroquois, even more resistant, add the French to their list of enemies. Other factions enlist on one side or the other—French soldiers and anti-Catholic English, for example—but the dramatic pulse of Parkmans narrative is provided by the Jesuits earnestly matriculating among the Indians, undergoing great hardship and occasionally embracing martyrdom.
Review
“[Parkman] remains one of the greatest historians, an imaginative writer who demonstrated that narrative history can be both captivating to the reader and historically accurate.”—Howard Lamar, Readers Encyclopedia of the American West Howard Lamar
About the Author
Conrad E. Heidenreich is a professor of geography at York University in Ontario and the author of Huronia: A History and Geography of the Huron Indians, 1600-1650 and other works. José António Brandão is the author of “Your fyre shall burn no more”: Iroquois Policy toward New France and Its Native Allies to 1701 (Nebraska 1997).