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Books matching: brutalities of colonial settlers

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  1. 'White Devil: A True Story of War, Savagery, and Vengeance in Colonial America' by Stephen Brumwell is a historical account focusing on the mercenary regiment led by Robert Rogers, who played a crucial role in the French and Indian War. The book provides a detailed narrative of the political and military landscape in colonial Canada, highlighting the relationships between various factions including Native American tribes and the French and British forces. Through vivid storytelling, Brumwell portrays the brutalities and challenges faced by colonial settlers during this tumultuous period, while also shedding light on the unexpected moments of humanity amidst the conflicts.


  2. #2

    The Secret River - Thornhill Family by Kate Grenville
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    Sal is the bright spot in Will Thornhill's life in the dark days of early 19th century London. They marry and life is good until he is convicted of theft and luckily is transported to New South Wales to a life of brutal work and hardship. Sal shares this harsh life and agrees to stay five years after he is emancipated and becomes a landowner. Their land on the Hawkeswbury River is primitive and inhabited by black aborigines. The resolution to the culture clash is inevitable as documented by history over the ages. Grenville's dispassionate and fair telling of this familiar story makes for an honest book about a disturbing event with tragic consequences. This is a superb book. At first, the story line seems to follow a slightly predictable path. Still, Grenville is a superb writer, so you're hooked the characters are alive, and you feel you're right there in early 19th century London Australia with them. As the book progresses, the story increasingly heads down into darkness you can feel it coming, but there's nothing you can do as a reader to stop it overwhelming the main character. Grenville is master of anti heroes I can never decide whether her protagonists are totally likeable. Yet, if they're not entirely so, that is only because they are totally realistic and recognizably human. Read it. It's superb.

    The Alexander, with its cargo of convicts, had bucked over the face of the ocean for the better part of a year. Now it had fetched up at the end of the earth. There was no lock on the door of the hut ...

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