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Isobel Gunn

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In the summer of 1806, a young Orkney woman disguised herself as a man and signed on with the Hudson's Bay Company to travel to what was then called Rupert's Land. For a year and a half she hid her identity and her deception was revealed only when she was giving birth to a baby boy. In less than an hour, she turned from John Fubbister into Isobel Gunn. Very little is known about the real woman — her birth certificate, a few entries in the Hudson's Bay Company logbook, a line in the census, her obituary. Audrey Thomas has taken the threads of Isobel Gunn's story and turned them into a compelling novel about an unusual woman, her short life, and the effect she had on those around her. Audrey Thomas first heard the story of Isobel Gunn while she was living in Scotland in the mid-1980s. She was based in Edinburgh for a year as a Canada-Scotland Literary Fellow and travelled extensively within the country. A number of years later, Thomas was on assignment in Scotland's Orkney Isles for Saturday Night Magazine when she heard the story again and decided she had to write about it. There was little factual material available, but Thomas spent four years researching the story and the colourful era in which it took place. Her research led to the rich texture of the book, incorporating historically accurate details of the period and capturing the social attitudes of the day.

230 pages, Hardcover

First published January 1, 1999

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About the author

Audrey Thomas

39 books9 followers
Audrey Grace Thomas, née Callahan, novelist and short story writer (b at Binghamton, NY 17 Nov 1935). Audrey Thomas was educated at Smith College, Mass, and St Andrews University, Scotland, and then taught in England for a year. In 1959 she moved to Canada and in 1963 earned an MA at the University of British Columbia. From 1964 to 1966 she lived in Ghana, but eventually settled on Galiano Island. She has published more than 15 novels and short story collections, more than 20 radio plays, several broadcast on CBC Radio, and numerous travel articles, some of which featured in Air Canada's in-flight magazine.

Thomas' writing has been described as feminine; her forte is the minutiae of women's lives, and she has claimed to strive "to demonstrate the terrible gap between men and women" and "to give women a sense of their bodies." Her style is characterized by word play; she emphasizes puns, etymologies, euphemisms, words within words, and pointing to the inherent possibilities, ironies and ambiguities of language. This close attention to language highlights the act of writing itself, and the possibilities and impossibilities of communication in human relationships. Her writing is also rich with literary allusion, from Shakespeare to Conrad, and from the Bible to Alice's Adventures in Wonderland.

Audrey Thomas is a multi-award winning author. She has been recognized provincially, winning the Ethel Wilson Prize three times (for Intertidal Life, 1985, Wild Blue Yonder, 1991 and Coming Down from Wa, 1996). She has twice been nominated for the Governor General's Award (1984 and 1985), and has been internationally recognized with the Canada-Scotland Writer's Literary fellowship (1984-6) and the Canada-Australia Literary Prize (1989). In 1987 she won the Marian Engel Award, awarded annually to a female Canadian author for her contribution to Canadian literature. In 2003 Audrey Thomas won the Terasen Lifetime Achievement Award.

(from http://www.thecanadianencyclopedia.co...)

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5 stars
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30 (42%)
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26 (36%)
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Displaying 1 - 11 of 11 reviews
Profile Image for Philippa Dowding.
Author 22 books68 followers
June 25, 2016
This is such an interesting story. Based loosely on the real life of Hudson's Bay Company man, John Fubbister, who arrives in Moose Factory in 1806 to work in the fur trade for three years ... until "he" gives birth to a healthy baby boy in 1807! Isobel Gunn had been living as a man in one of the most inhospitable places on earth, masquerading as HBC man John Fubbister, for almost two years until she had a child by co-worker John Scarth. How fascinating (and a bit of a surprise for Alexander Henry who found Isobel/John in the throes of labour on his hearth!).

I liked this book, it was really moving and quite beautifully written in places. It seems very real, since Thomas brings the wasteland of James Bay, Moose Factory, Fort Albany, and the woods of 19th century Canada to life pretty well. You get to know the inner workings of the HBC from its earliest days, and the book is full of weird facts and strange truths about frontier life in James Bay, native life and trade, and lots about the humble beaver. The Scottish Orkney Islands play a big part too, as does the sea. Obviously a great deal of work went into the historical research.

But ... outside of the careful historical stuff and the fact that Isobel Gunn was a woman among men, most of the story itself and the rest of the characters, are fictional. Which is a pity, in a way. I would have liked to know more about the real Isobel Gunn, but I suppose there was probably very little written about her in her lifetime, and she was illiterate so couldn't write her own story. It seems that Thomas also alters some of the key facts we did know to be true about Isobel Gunn (her son stays with her in reality for instance) which strikes me as odd: why change the truth?

Still, if you like historical fiction, and you're at all interested in one writer's imaginings of what one woman's life masquerading as a man might have been like on the frontier of the Canadian fur trade ... it's a good read. If this sounds interesting, you might also want to read "The Orenda" by Joseph Boyden. Here's my review of that book: https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...
Profile Image for LibraryCin.
2,682 reviews59 followers
April 9, 2016
3.5 stars

Isobel Gunn was a woman who grew up on the Orkney Islands (Scotland) in the late 1700s/early 1800s, but decided to disguise herself as a man in 1806 to get to Rupert's Land (part of what is now Canada). She worked as a man for over a year before giving birth to a son and being found out. Not much is known about the real Isobel Gunn.

This wasn't quite what I expected, as it was not told from Isobel's point of view. It was told from the point of view of a minister in Rupert's Land, a minister who also grew up in Orkney, and had met Isobel a couple of times when she was a little girl (although she didn't remember him). So, it initially took me a little bit to realize this and that the book wouldn't switch to Isobel's point of view. Once I finally gave in to that, it got a little more interesting for me in the second half of the book. Overall, it was good, just not quite what I expected.
447 reviews2 followers
October 22, 2016
Story concept was good. The author's portrayal of the main character as a caring, determined survivor makes the reader sympathetic to what Isobel has gone through, and hopes for a happy ending.
I would have preferred that the story be told in chronological order. I found the first half of the book a little confusing, because it referred to characters that we hadn't encountered yet. At one point, I skimmed through the earlier chapters again, to no avail, looking for a character that had been named in two different parts of the book, only to find out that the character is not introduced until near the end of the book. I enjoyed the second half of the book, after I was able to figure out who each character was, and the sequence of events.
Profile Image for Lori.
42 reviews
April 17, 2010
Amazing story of a woman who worked for The Hudson's Bay Company as a man, until she was discovered. This was a chapter of Canadian history of which I was unaware until I happened upon this book.
260 reviews
January 6, 2020
Historical fiction at it's very, very best
The main plot in itself is fantastic - but the other elements (spiritual questions; sidebars with other characters) make it simply beautiful
Profile Image for Amy.
644 reviews1 follower
April 7, 2022
Excellently compassionate book about Isobel Dunn, a famous Orkney Islander making her way in the world.
Profile Image for Luce Cronin.
560 reviews6 followers
November 5, 2024
What a very interesting story! The author has rendered a piece of Scottish and Canadian history into an engaging novel!
Profile Image for Mallee Stanley.
Author 4 books8 followers
October 2, 2023
The Orkney islanders think Isobel Gunn is crazy when she races to meet each ship docked in the harbour asking about James. Only Magnus remembers how heroic Isobel was twenty years earlier when she disguised herself as a man and sailed to Rupert’s Land back in the 1800s to work in the harsh Canadian wilderness.

Equally as good is Thomas’ Tatty Coram, a minor character from one of Dickens’ novels whom she weaves into the life of Dickens himself.

For more of my 5 out of 5 reviews visit https://readandwrite.blog/malleestanley/
Profile Image for Diana Sandberg.
844 reviews
June 21, 2009
Excellent, though dreadfully sad. I was relieved somewhat, if somewhat irrationally, to look up Isobel Gunn online and find the details of her life diverged from this story at a crucial point. I say irrationally because the reality of the story lies in the heartache depicted, not the correlation to history. If the real Isobel Gunn did not live these events, others have, piecemeal perhaps, and it is the recognition of that that makes the story so sad.
1 review
May 17, 2012
The narration of this book was confusing, it jumped around too much and so lost any suspense. Sometimes I couldn't figure out who was talking or where the narrator was.
Last part seemed emotionally manipulative, it was too sad.
Profile Image for Cheryl.
98 reviews
June 7, 2010
Supposedly based on a true story, it's a good CanLit story. The odd hole in the plot, but overall quite good.
Displaying 1 - 11 of 11 reviews

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