Sick Heart River
Sick Heart River (1941) is a novel by Scottish author John Buchan set in Canada. It was published posthumously. The book was published in the United States under the title Mountain Meadow.
Plot summary
Sir Edward Leithen is diagnosed with advanced tuberculosis and given a year to live. While deciding how to spend his remaining days, an American associate, John S. Blenkiron, requests help to find his niece's husband, Francis Galliard, who has disappeared from his very successful financial career in New York and fled to Canada.
Leithen follows Galliard to the Quebec. During this he finds a mountain meadow he had seen on a trip thirty years earlier and which has stayed in his memory since.
Leithen finds Galliard and nurses him back to health. He then decides to stay with some Indians and help them.[1][2]
Background
Buchan wrote this while Governor General of Canada and Chancellor of the University of Edinburgh and it was published posthumously following his death as a result of a fall and stroke. It is one of Buchan's most spiritual novels, talking about death and redemption.
The fictional Sick Heart River is in the real region of the Nahanni River in Canada's Northwest Territories. The area was only just being mapped when Buchan, as Governor-General Lord Tweedsmuir, passed nearby during his voyage down the Mackenzie River in the summer of 1937. Buchan always wanted to visit the Nahanni but never made it before his death in February 1940.[3]
References
- ↑ "LATEST FICTION.". The Advertiser (Adelaide, SA : 1931 - 1954) (Adelaide, SA: National Library of Australia). 5 July 1941. p. 10. Retrieved 22 July 2015.
- ↑ "TESTIMONY OF FAITH In Buchan's Last Novel.". The Telegraph (Brisbane, Qld. : 1872 - 1947) (Brisbane, Qld.: National Library of Australia). 2 August 1941. p. 5 Edition: LATE WEEK END. Retrieved 22 July 2015.
- ↑ Sick Heart River at John Buchan Society
External links
- Project Gutenberg Australia. "Sick Heart River (1941)". Retrieved 2010-10-17.
- Review of Sick Heart River at the John Buchan Society website
- Review at Oxonian
|