A VISITING MISSIONARY’S ROUSING TALES OF ADVENTURE abroad fire up Sara Stanley’s imagination. With true zeal, she takes up the missionary’s cause with Peter Craig, the young hired hand at Rose Cottage. As she soon discovers, though, there’s more to goodness and charity than just going to church — and it’s Peter who teaches everyone that lesson.Adapted from the award-winning, internationally acclaimed television series, the magical adventures of “The Story Girl” continue — in the spirit and tradition of Lucy Maud Montgomery — for a new generation of young readers.“Road to Avonlea offers family programming filled with warmth, charm and more.”LOS ANGELES TIMES“Road to Avonlea confirms its status as the most consistently high quality television series Canada has ever produced.”THE GLOBE AND MAIL
Gail Hamilton has been creating novels since the great romance boom began, writing for Harlequin and other publishers. She has been a farm hand, English teacher, ad copywriter, and once rode a British Bedford truck across the Sahara and back to see Timbuctu. All of it is fodder for her fiction. She is drawn to action, romance, adventure and characters with a distinctly odd twist. These show up in her many romance novels and her fast-moving historical, The Tomorrow Country.
After trying urban life in Europe and Toronto, Gail returned to live on the family farm where she grew up. In this rural corner hugging the north shore of Lake Ontario, Gail digs into the rich, raucous local history. She cherishes a secret passion for animated movies and loves photographing the nature all around her, reading the constant changes like a newspaper every morning.
When she blogs, it’s apt to be about a wind-downed oak that was a beloved childhood friend, amazing chipmunk facts, a dramatic house fire in the village, odd Victorian crimes, or what vampires might do when the sun goes red giant and gobbles up our planet. “Somehow,” she says, “I can’t get into hard-nosed book promotion. I’d rather write about the quirky what ifs that pop into my head. I am lucky to live in the vibrant natural countryside so many urbanites secretly thirst for but cannot access. That’s why all those tough-shelled professionals love to read about the return of garter snakes to the spring air or how field mice survive an ice storm. Our ancestral genes still tell us we are supposed to be out there, living it for ourselves."
What better place to hatch new tales for everyone’s enjoyment.
Great novelization. It did give a little more insight into the episode than was able to be shown onscreen and I appreciated that as a fan of the series.
"Conversions" is a novelization of an episode (season 1 episode 7) from the popular Canadian TV series Road to Avonlea. One thing that readers- especially new fans of the series- should keep in mind is that the novel is set in the early 20th century (1903–1912), and one of the storylines involves a missionary narrative, which means that there'll be some usage of outdated terms with obvious colonial undertones. I actually didn't notice the problematic use of such language the first time I read the book at 12 or 13, but it was glaringly obvious now. That being said, I do think that the novel provides an opportunity to learn about how missionaries viewed and treated Indigenous populations, as well as how being "different" because of class, religious (Christian) denomination, or lifestyle set you apart, and sometimes made you inferior, in Avonlea. Yet, it's those characters who are different, namely Peter Craig and Peg Bowen, that teach the citizens of Avonlea to finally be more accepting and kind to their fellow neighbours. I gave this book a two star rating the first time around, but after reading it for a second time, what I loved about the book was reading about Peter Craig and the experiences and struggles of a young hired hand at the turn of the 19th century, as well as Peg Bowen aka the witch of Avonlea because she lives by her own rules and lives off the land. "Conversions" is a nostalgic read for fans of the series.
I loved it! Such a riveting tale. I couldn’t put it down. I got so engrossed in the story that I actually felt like I was apart of the story. I also love the TV series and movies as well.