This is a terrific historical novel about the early years in and around Victoria and the lives of the women who spent their time waiting to go to grand or modest balls with naval officers and surveyors and hoping for marriage proposals. But it is much more in-depth than this superficial description would suggest and it is no formulaic bodice-ripper, i.e., it is very well written.
The commentary for each chapter comes from quotes selecting from the writing of men in many different positions, most of them Englishmen in fairly exalted positions, and the attitudes toward the “colonies and rough colonialists, the half-breeds and quarter-breeds, the savages” serve as stark contrast to the hospitality shown to them by the Chief Factor’s family in particular. Racism and sexism are, of course, rampant but the truth is that many of the most powerful people in Victoria were of mixed heritage including James Douglas the Governor and his wife as well as the Chief Factor’s family. The scarcity of young women who were white or "passably so" in the tent city and Hudson's Bay fort that once was Victoria and the social and culinary skills of the matriarchs put the lie to both ‘isms’ many times over of course. The men left written accounts and from the women we have needlework and marriage, birth and death records kept by the Church. So the author has invented 3-D lives for the women and men as well of this rough and tumble era and thanks to her research and understanding of human nature, we have a great book to read.
It was gratifying to read the later quotes from several men who had gained a few years of experience in the Fraser Valley or further north on Vancouver Island upon returning to the ever-growing settlement of Victoria. These quotes reflected their changing attitudes and true appreciation of the gracious and unstinting hospitality received from the Chief Factor’s family in particular. The early colonial research seems painstaking and impeccable to my eye (I am no expert on this era) and best of all, it does not get in the way of a very good narrative as it tends to do in less capable hands than those possessed by this author. The main character, an intelligent young woman whose darker complexion has made her less desirable to some suitors than her fairer sisters is a complex and thoroughly believable human being caught in a vise of cultural and gender dynamics, aware of it and powerless to do much about it. The etiquette of that era meant that unmarried sisters always entered a room behind their married sisters and the descriptions of the status conferred by marriage and the triumphant entrances made by the young brides is enough to make a modern woman, okay, me, hurl a shoe at the young snobs and yell, "Take a look at what you married, you birdbrain! He's a drunk and a no-goodnik who married you for your father's money!"
A thoroughly enjoyable read with utterly memorable characters, male and female, adult and child, dogs and horses too. I very much appreciated the appendix which informed us what became of many of the characters who were once living breathing individuals, as in real life historical figures, and it quietly hit home, then as now, how tragically short some people’s lives are and how some who begin with great promise, fizzle for all sorts of reasons, while others, less well-thought of in their youth, become very successful in matters of career, political influence and/or a happy family life.