Scott Chantler became one of our favorite comics artists and writers with his amazing young adult fantasy series Three Thieves, so I was intrigued to see how he'd take on historical fiction. I wasn't disappointed.
Northwest Passage is set in 1755 in Canada at an English fort, during a time when the English and French struggled for power over the Hudson Bay area. The story is centered around Charles Lord, a semi-famous adventurer who basically got moved to desk duty of governing the fort for years, but plans to seek the titular fabled water route through North America to the Pacific now that he's retiring. Unfortunately for Lord, French invaders take the incoming English supply ship that's supposed to take Lord back to England to raise funds for his expedition, and things only get worse from there.
Tightly interwoven with the fate of the fort, and IMHO even more compelling, are two intersecting human stories: (1) Lord's relationship with his embittered son Simon, whose mother Bright Moon, from the Opaskwayak Cree tribe, died when he was young, and (2) the experience of Lord's nephew Fletcher, who'd traveled on the supply ship to serve at the fort, but finds himself swept up in terrifying violence and then held as a hostage. Lord and Simon's story is heartbreaking and the jewel of the book, especially a dinner scene in Chapter 2 where they sit at opposite ends of a long table, unable to communicate honestly. It's an amazing use of same panel repeatedly with slight alterations to show us the dysfunction of their life together.
I don't have enough expertise to say whether the Cree representation here is acceptable, but I noticed that while most of the story's main characters are white, the Cree living nearby the fort clearly have their own lives and agendas separate from whatever's going on between the English and the French. Other tribes are mentioned as well, and Lord's egalitarian views seem author-endorsed. The book mostly depicts functional business relationships between the tribes and the English and French, but violence against the Cree by invading settlers isn't ignored.
I read the paperback version of the Annotated Edition, which was originally published in hardback, and I recommend reading all the back matter if you read it. The historical grounding and storytelling process notes Chantler shares were quite interesting. My only regret is that at the time of writing, he seemed to have plans for continuing the story, but it never happened!
Content warning: Late in the book, an evil male character discloses his past rape of a female character. It's not detailed.