Roots  the Remittance Man, Jean Busby
Roots  the Remittance Man, Jean Busby
List: $25.00 | Sale: $17.50
Club: $12.50

Roots & the Remittance Man

Author: Jean Busby

Narrator: Laura Lambert

Unabridged: 15 hr 6 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Published: 02/12/2025

Categories: Fiction


Synopsis

In Roots & the Remittance Man, a captivating historical fiction, we follow a diverse family tree as its branches converge in the Carrot River Valley of the Northwest Territories in 1902. From Sweden, Muskoka, and Iowa, these intrepid settlers make their way to homestead near Melfort, Saskatchewan. A Scottish family, burdened by loss from an epidemic, travels by wagon train, finding salvation in a Cree chief. In Sweden, tragedy strikes, and a widowed wife and her daughters board a cattle ship for Halifax. They arrive in Winnipeg, accept a cook position at a Melfort hotel, and embark on a grueling journey through forest and muskeg. A young Norwegian man walks 700 miles to the United States-Canadian border, immerses himself in Indigenous history, and follows a freight swing to his homestead. Settlers and Indigenous peoples unite against prairie fires, forging bonds that transcend their differences. Through decades, the family experiences joys and sorrows, weathering the storms of two World Wars, prohibition, swamp fever, the Ku Klux Klan, and the Great Depression. As technology advances, women gain the right to vote and become legally recognized as persons. At the outset of World War II, a remittance man from Scotland enters the picture, his life becoming significantly entwined with the descendants of these resilient pioneers. Roots & the Remittance Man is a sweeping tale of perseverance, unity, and the indomitable human spirit that shaped the Canadian frontier.

Reviews

Goodreads review by Joan on October 26, 2024

I appreciated the extensive overview of life for Scandinavians and Scottish settlers settling into the Canadian prairies in this last century, especially since my own family history correlates in so many respects. Busby’s writing style itself could use more editorial work, but I appreciated the hist......more