4,5 Bring Me With You For A New Life Stars
Sometimes is not just a good book, but a good book at the right moment. This is pretty much what happened with Heaven in his arms: I was completely delighted by the plot, the locations, the pace and the lovestory, I wished the adventures would never stop...I needed a book like this right now. I didn't even realise this was actually published in 1995, it didn't feel or sound dated to me.
It is not a literary masterpiece, but it works so perfectly at every level, even if the tension slacks during the last part. The language flew and swept me along, there is a warmth, effervescence and verve running through all of it that got me easily captivated. The historical period is one of my favourites, same as the settings - France after La Fronde, colonialism in Canada - and I felt right at home. I watched the story unfold with the excitement of a child in a unicorn shop. The plot was perhaps not super original but perfectly executed, the pace kept me holding my breath almost constantly and the lovestory is equally sweet and wonderfully lustful.
Two strongheaded protagonists, André and Genevieve, bound to have memorable clashes of will, words and yes, eventually sex too. They fight, they banter, they plot, they try to up each other, they seduce and run from it at the same time and believe me, there are some mean pranks too here, something I didn't see coming at all in a romance. After so much UST and the abandon or real consumption of such bottled desire, seeing them fall in love, full selfless love, not only lust, was a beautiful thing. Both characters had the chance to grow and change during the story arch, becoming both softer and stronger at the same time. They are not perfect, they are not noble, they are fighters and survivers, self-making individuals, but when they give, they give completely. Jealousy and virginity tropes are used in a way I didn't expect but very much worked.
I fell in love with the nature of course, I love Canada, how could I not? I found it again an important character and it had to be, most of this book being spent travelling through breathtaking but unforgiving wilderness to establish a steady fur trade. I wanted to know more about every single canoemen of the expedition! I had a slight problem with how some Indian tribes were repeatedly described, very one-sided, but it did make sense to the period and the characters. There were also quite some consistent jabs at nobility and societal wrong limitations.
I am not giving 5 stars because the last section became a bit tamer, the sex scenes (which are welcome of course) more frequent but not adding anything to the story anymore and the end was wrapped a bit too quickly. I will remember André and Genevieve with fondness and gratitude but I will let them go at a certain point. They gave me what I needed right now.
Thank you Celestine for bringing this to my attention! <3