Set in a mining and lumberjack boom town in the 1880s, this literary work centres on a new minister who brings the fight for men s souls to the doors of the seedy saloons and dastardly drug pushers. Plots, fights, and double-crosses abound in the back-and-forth battle played out in the lives of several well-developed characters.
University of Toronto educated Charles William Gordon, ordained as a Presbyterian minister in 1890. Under the pseudonym Ralph Connor, he published more than thirty novels, including The Man from Glengarry (1901) and Glengarry School Days (1902). These novels made him an internationally best-selling author.
Important historical insight into the life of immigrant workers in the lumber camps and mining camps of British Columbia in the 1800s. Inspiring tale of a Christian preacher and the lives he influences.
terrible religious junk. of course this is the opinion coming from an atheist , me. My book was an original published in 1896 and each page fell from the binding as I turned it making a mess making its reading even more annoying to me. The leather binding was the only good thing about it, all in the trash now.
This book is a Christian social justice message of its time. It's all about the evils of drink. It was to bad that Conner chose to spend all his time on this issue instead of using his skill with the pen just to tell a good story (which probably would have conveyed his point better)
I found an old old old copy of this at the library (one owner wrote "December 25, 1904" on the inside of the cover) so I bought it out of curiosity. I look forward to reading it soon.