
Maria Chapdelaine - Louis Hémon - I
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In a frozen corner of the Quebec wilderness, the little wooden church of Péribonka stands like a solitary beacon against a snow‑blanketed river and endless white fields. Inside, men in fur coats and bright scarves trade jokes, smoke hand‑rolled pipes, and share the latest news of river ice, government work projects, and the uncertain harvest to come. Their hearty laughter and rough‑spun chatter reveal a community hardened by the land yet bound together by a stubborn, invincible cheer.
Amid this stark backdrop lives Maria, a young woman whose life is woven tightly into the rhythms of the settlement. As spring threatens to melt the ice, she faces the weight of family expectations, the pull of love, and the harsh realities of frontier survival. The story follows her quietly determined spirit, exploring how hope and hardship shape the choices she must make in a world where every season brings both promise and peril.
Language
fr
Duration
~4 hours (270K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
This text was adapted from that found at the Bibliothèque virtuelle. http://www.fsj.ualberta.ca/biblio/default.htm Thank you to Donald Ipperciel and the Faculté Saint-Jean (University of Alberta) for making it available.
Release date
2004-09-25
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1880–1913
Best known for the novel Maria Chapdelaine, this French writer turned a brief stay in Quebec into one of the most enduring portraits of rural French Canadian life. His career was short, but the book he finished in Canada became a classic.
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