I chose this as my "read historical fiction set before 1900" (Read Harder), but it's really historical fantasy and the fact that it was a poor choice is my fault. The historical part:
1) In 1585-6 an English colony was set down at Roanoke, the fleet left to get supplies, there was an attack by peoples of the First Nations which was repelled.
2) In 1586 - Sir Francis Drake happened by and collected those that wanted to return to England with him. With them they also brought the following: potatoes, tobacco, and corn. A small contingent was left to protect England's interests in the Americas.
3) 1587 a new colony was dispatched, this time to Chesapeake bay, but they (the Governor and a few others) set down at Roanoke to check in with the guard...which was gone. duh duh duhn!
4) For reasons, this group was not allowed back on the ships and the entire colony was disembarked at Roanoke rather than continuing to Chesapeake.
5) A colonist is killed, the colony feels threatened, and Gov. White heads to England (suddenly allowed back on board the ship!) to explain the colony's fears. Time passes. White returns in 1590 and finds the colony gone. The only clue was the word "CROATOAN" carved into a fence. This is a reference to an First Nations settlement nearby, but due to a brewing storm the fleet left without checking....duh duh duhn!
Now the fantasy:
This is the purported diary of a fictional female colonist, Emme Merrimoth, twice married, childless (3 dead back in London) who is the domestic servant and soon to be wet nurse for a pair of colonists. She is promiscuous, bedding the fleet captain, the governor, one of the other colonists, and finally one of the originial 15 who was an Indian captive. She's disliked by most of the colonists, but gets on well with the First Peoples.
My issues: the wet nursing bit (how is this possible?!!!), the promiscuity (why, why, why?!!!), the level of her education (would a domestic be able to write a journal and where did she get the paper?), and the whole noble vs. evil savage vibe. Basically, it suffers from being a first novel and a man writing a female perspective. Not quite man-splaining, but not far off.
Not recommended but not quite airborne.