François
François

François is born on a farm near Bordeaux, France

François

Eager for adventure he joins the French military and sails to New France in June 1755.

François

His regiment – Régiment de Guyenne – is sent to Fort Frontenac then to Fort Niagara.

François

The regiment engages in several battles including Fort Oswego in August 1756 and the capture of Fort William Henry in 1757.

François

They also fight at Carillon in 1758, a huge victory for the French under Louis-Joseph De Montcalm. François is badly wounded but recovers quickly after being personally thanked by Montcalm.

François

Soldiers from France are often boarded with French Canadian families, so François is assigned to Henri’s family.

François

In 1759, he befriends Michel, a fellow French soldier who arrives to the colony from France onboard the Chézine, one of the last ships to sail to New France.

François

During the siege, François finds himself in an unexpected but delightful situation with Madame Poirier.

François

He’ll nearly die under Fraser’s powerful broadsword, but his life might be saved by an Ursuline nun, Sister Saint Theresa.

Madame Poirier
Madame Poirier

Madame Poirier is from the Faubourg Saint-Germain area of Paris, an exclusive enclave for families of the nobility.

Madame Poirier

She marries a man below her class – a member from the Estates-General who acquired noble status by purchasing a title from the government of King Louis XV.

Madame Poirier

Her husband, an officer in Régiment de la Sarre, follows Louis-Joseph De Montcalm to New France in 1756 but he dies after being severely wounded during the fighting at the Battle of Carillon leaving her a widow with three children.

Madame Poirier

In her widowhood, Madame Poirier flirts with joining the Ursuline Order in Quebec but is advised by Sister Saint Theresa that she would better serve God by working in the hospital.

Madame Poirier

Instead Madame Poirier grows close to Madame De La Fontaine and becomes caught up in all the petty intrigues and gossip inside Quebec aristocracy.

Madame Poirier

She gets into an unexpected argument with James Wolf and develops a fierce crush on François.

Sister Saint Theresa
Sister Saint Theresa

Sister Saint Theresa is brought to the Ursuline Monastery in Quebec when she is five months old to be raised by the nuns.  She has never been told anything about her family or where she came from.

Sister Saint Theresa

She is gentle with Ginette and her cow Mudpie, but she’s rough with others and often argues with Father Rene-Paradise and Sister Saint Elpidius and anyone else in her vicinity.

Sister Saint Theresa

She constantly quotes her heroine, Saint Theresa of Ávila, “Lord, either let me suffer or let me die.

Sister Saint Theresa

Like the other nuns, she struggles to uphold a moral climate in a country of disparate factions – starving farmers and gluttonous aristocrats.

Sister Saint Theresa

She will have the distinction of saving the life of Fraser, a Scottish Highlander,

Sister Saint Theresa

then holding a French soldier François in her arms as he dies on the evening of 13 September 1759,

Sister Saint Theresa

then later holding Louis-Joseph De Montcalm as he dies in the early hours of 14 September 1759.

Cyrus
Cyrus

Cyrus is born into genteel poverty in 1737 in Hawleys Corner UK and is indirectly related to the Wolfe family by marriage.

Cyrus

Cyrus’ father is killed in the Jacobite Rising in 1745 so Cyrus is sent to live with his aunt and he joins the military at 18.

Cyrus

Obsessed by mammals and birds, shy yet eager to please, Cyrus immediately accepts an offer from James Wolfe to be his Valet – an offer likely initiated by James mother, Henrietta.

Cyrus

Cyrus travels by horse and foot to Portsmouth where he joins the General and sails to Quebec.

Cyrus

For the first few days at sea, it’s a veritable barfing contest between James Wolfe and Cyrus. Eventually Cyrus gets his sea legs…Wolfe never does.

Cyrus

As well as being Bram’s handler, Cyrus finds himself learning how to handle humans, in particular the three British Brigadiers – Townshend, Murray and Monckton, an ambitious washerwoman named Polly, an enamoured Sargent Harris, and Fraser, a jovial Highlander who turns out to be as much of a friend to Cyrus, as an enemy.

Cyrus

He is entranced by the animals of New France – the Moose, Fox, Deer and the Owl – and dreams of someday writing a book about animals.

Polly
Polly

Polly is born in Blackpool around 1734 and abandoned at birth.

Polly

She has worked since she is five stealing food and lodgings and occasional affection. Along the way she hops a barge to Southport then down to Liverpool.

Polly

Nothing is known about how she made it to the London docks then down to Portsmouth, but she was the first in line and the loudest when ‘washer women’ jobs came up on a fleet heading to Quebec.

Polly

Onboard she fends off sexual advances from Brigadiers to soldiers like Fraser and beats up one Sargent Harris so badly he nearly dies.

Polly

She tolerates Cyrus and likes animals including Bram and a Red Fox she occasionally catches sight of in the woods.

Polly

Polly begs James Wolfe to give her a job as a powder monkey – someone who ferries gunpowder from the powder magazine in the ship’s hold to the artillery pieces, either in bulk or as cartridges, in order to minimize the risk of fires or explosions – but instead he promotes her to nursing.

Polly

Ironically it is Sargent Harris who gives Polly a chance to prove herself as capable a soldier as any man.

Ginette
Ginette

Ginette is a third generation French Canadian born on a farm in Quebec in 1744. Her mother died in childbirth.

Ginette

The furthest Ginette has travelled is to Beauport, but in her imagination, Ginette has travelled to every place in the world the nuns and priests have talked about – Rome, Jerusalem, Spain …

Ginette

– and to places in stories told to her by her friend  Gabriel Hannenorak

Ginette

She has also travelled to her idealized court of Versailles, resplendent with beautiful animals and kind people, a vision opposite the nest of indulgent, competitive, stressed vipers that inhabit the real life kingdom of Louis XV.

Ginette

She cares for the family milk cow, Mudpie, who is an important source of revenue, and she often helps Sister Saint Theresa and occasionally does chores for Madame Poirier and Madame De La Fontaine.

Ginette

Although she has plans to marry Henri, Ginette has a secret.

Ginette

She accidentally meets Louis-Joseph De Montcalm and they keep meeting, often talking of God and forgiveness, a subject that obsesses them both.

Solange
Solange

Solange is born on a farm in Quebec in 1720 and is the oldest sister of Ginette’s deceased mother.

Solange

Singularly uninterested in marriage or religion (a positioned frowned upon in 18th century France and New France),

Solange

Solange spends most of her time in the barn or in the fields looking after the animals on Ginette’s father’s farm…though lately there are fewer and fewer animals to look after.

Solange

Madame Poirier and Madame De La Fontaine tease her, Sister Saint Theresa is afraid of her and the soldiers ignore her.

Solange

Ginette, Henri and Gabriel Hannenorak are the only ones who care for her.

Solange

Solange loves Mudpie and especially loves her precious Sow & Piglets but one day, after her Sow is stolen and most of the Piglets die without their mother, Solange decides to take matters into her own hand.

Louis-Joseph de Montcalm
Louis-Joseph de Montcalm

Louis-Jospeh De Montcalm is born in 1712 at Candiac, France, into an old and distinguished family of the nobility of the robe. 

Louis-Joseph de Montcalm

At age 9, he is commissioned as ensign in the Régiment d’Hainaut and only eight years later, he becomes a Captain – a rank likely purchased by his family.

Louis-Joseph de Montcalm

Louis-Joseph was not fond of school and eager for military engagement. He serves in the Rhineland in the War of the Polish Succession under Maréchal de Saxe and the Maréchal Duke of Berwick.

Louis-Joseph de Montcalm

In 1736, he marries Angélique-Louise Talon de Boulay, who, by most accounts, remains the love of his life. They have six children.

Louis-Joseph de Montcalm

During the War of Austrian Succession he is aide-de-camp to Lieutenant General Marquis de La Fare and is wounded in Prague. He possesses courage and thrives on being in the thick of battle.

Louis-Joseph de Montcalm

He attains the rank of Colonel of the Régiment d’Auxerrois – a regiment he purchases in 1743 for 40,00 livres – and he fights in Italy.  He is made a knight of Saint-Louis.

Louis-Joseph de Montcalm

In 1746, at Piacenza, Montcalm’s regiment is decimated. He’s badly wounded and taken prisoner.

Louis-Joseph de Montcalm

Upon recovery, he is appointed brigadier but is wounded again during The Battle of Assietta in Italy. In 1748, after peace is declared, he is commissioned to raise a regiment of cavalry in his name.

Louis-Joseph de Montcalm

During the next seven years of peace Montcalm enjoys being at home with his family. But in 1756 the Seven Years War erupts between France and England.

Louis-Joseph de Montcalm

Louis-Joseph is appointed Major-General and sails to New France.

Louis-Joseph de Montcalm

Although he tangles with Vaudreuil, the Governor General of Quebec, Montcalm wins every battle he leads in New France – Fort Oswego in 1756, Fort William Henry in 1757 and Fort Carillon in 1758 – so perhaps he can win in 1759 against  General James Wolfe.

Louis-Joseph de Montcalm

Montcalm adores his Horse.  Bougainville gives Montcalm a cat named Minue that he comes to cherish.

Louis-Joseph de Montcalm

He also cherishes his growing romance with Madame De La Fontaine, his friendship with Ginettewhom he treats like the daughter he lost, and with Sister Saint Theresa, who helps him hold his faith in God when his faith in Quebec is shaken by despair.

Louis-Joseph de Montcalm

Montcalm is a stubborn, complex man. After five severe wounds and 38 years of service, he finds himself unexpectedly caught in a panic that will bury him.

Madame De La Fontaine
Madame De La Fontaine

Madame De La Fontaine is born in 1730 into a noble family in the Marais area of Paris. She and her four sisters are raised to believe one day they may marry into royalty and live at Versailles.

Madame De La Fontaine

But instead, headstrong and rebellious, Madame de la Fontaine marries Bernard de la Fontaine, a restless military officer from a noble family, who is briefly on leave from the War of the Austrian Succession raging through Europe.

Madame De La Fontaine

She is captivated by his uniform and by the thrilling stories he tells of his adventures in the field. Bernard is always away with his regiment, even after the war ends. It is likely he is closeted but she has no language for his rejection of her.

Madame De La Fontaine

Lonely for her family, Madame de la Fontaine turns to parties for attention and grows into a haughty social butterfly.

Madame De La Fontaine

In 1755, she accompanies her husband to New France with his Régiment de Guyenne. Arriving at Quebec, he heads for Fort Frontenac as she settles into their house.

Madame De La Fontaine

Louis-Joseph De Montcalm, Vaudreuil and his wife, Cadet, Bougainville and the Bishop all welcome her into their tiny Boubon bubble that echoes, in its decadence, the Bourbon Empire in France.

Madame De La Fontaine

There are parties, gambling sessions, feasts, dancing and maids and servants to do her bidding – sometimes farm girls, sometimes black slaves from the south and sometimes Indigenous people.

Madame De La Fontaine

Madame de la Fontaine befriends Madame Poirier and gets to know some of the people who live and work in the bustling town, people like Ginette, Solange, Henri and François.

Madame De La Fontaine

She has a run-in with James Wolfe when he briefly takes her and a few other women, prisoner.

Madame De La Fontaine

Madame de la Fontaine is attracted to the middle-aged Louis-Joseph De Montcalm, finding in him a deep yearning for home.

Madame De La Fontaine

She also enjoys his cat Minue.  Her narrow worldview is widened when she helps Sister Saint Theresa treat the wounded.

James Wolfe
James Wolfe

James Wolfe is born in a vicarage at Westerham, Kent, son of a military man and a loving, if somewhat possessive mother.

James Wolfe

At 13 he enters his father’s regiment as a volunteer. Though he’s a sickly young man he loves dogs and is keen on military life.

James Wolfe

At 16 he takes part in the hellish Battle of Dettingen and promoted to Lieutenant.

James Wolfe

In 1744 he is appointed captain in the 4th Foot and in 1745 he returns to England with the army to deal with Prince Charles Edward’s invasion.

James Wolfe

He takes part in the battle/slaughter of Culloden where he fights against Fraser, killing members of Fraser’s family.

James Wolfe

James studies Prussian warfare, French, Latin and mathematics. His first active service in the Seven Years’ War is the expedition of 1757 against Rochefort on the French Biscay coast – a disaster…

James Wolfe

– but in 1758, after a successful assault against Louisburg, Île Royale (Cape Breton), William Pitt, then Prime Minister of England appoints James to lead the British assault against Quebec.

James Wolfe

Prior to leaving, he falls in love with Katherine Lowther, whom he promises to marry upon his return.

James Wolfe

He decides to take his dog Bram and, after pressure from his mother, he reluctantly takes Cyrus as his Valet.

James Wolfe

He happily entertains Madame De La Fontaine, Madame Poirier and Ginette, among the many French prisoners taken by the British in late July, but quickly released.

James Wolfe

Although James often locks horns with his officers and his soldiers, including Sargent Harris and even Polly in her weaker moments, they love him.

James Wolfe

But the American soldier Pike Robinson has very different feelings towards Wolfe.

James Wolfe

There’s much heroic lore around the real-life figure, but basically James was a boy from the lower classes – aggressive, desperate to prove his worth, and lonely,

James Wolfe

– and whether it is his tactical brilliance, freak luck, or notes from a traitor that helps lead him to victory, James Wolfe was determined to win or die trying.

Sargent Harris
Sargent Harris

Sargent Harris is born in Southend, England into a poor fishing family. He is supposed to become a fisher like his two brothers but young Harris has bigger plans.

Sargent Harris

He’s a romantic who signs up early for adventure – anything to keep him on the water but away from the fish.

Sargent Harris

He goes to sea as a merchant sailor at the age of 14 and certainly has his share of adventures… battling both storms and pirates on the Atlantic, surviving a shipwreck in the Mediterranean, and sharks near the Bahamas.

Sargent Harris

But he’s keen for some education and perhaps a promotion in his field. Back in England the Seven Years War is brewing and Harris decides war might be a way to get a promotion and have another great adventure.

Sargent Harris

He joins the British Forces and participates in Siege of Louisburg in 1758.

Sargent Harris

He was also one of the 1,200 men hand-picked by General James Wolfe to seize Lighthouse Point during that siege.

Sargent Harris

He is chosen to participate in the attack on Quebec in 1759. Although they are his sworn enemies Harris is fascinated by Quebec and its inhabitants, and the Indigenous people who live alongside them.

Sargent Harris

He makes easy friends with Fraser, Cyrus, and even Polly after their initial dust-up.

Sargent Harris

He’ll have a run in with Bram and, due to circumstances beyond his control, may never get the promotion he hoped for, but he comes out of this adventure, forever changed.

Fraser
Fraser

Fraser is a member of Clan Fraser of Lovat, in Scotland. The clan name ‘Fraser’ is thought to have originated in France or in Roman Gaul.

Fraser

The Clan carries the motto Je suis prest (I am ready)… and the war cry “Caisteal Dhuni” which refers to their ancestral castle, Castle Dounie). An oral culture, stories, poems and songs are passed down through the generations.

Fraser

In 1562, the clan supports Mary Stuart, Queen of Scots. 

Fraser

In 1730, Fraser is born in a valley near Edinburgh. Herding livestock and eking out an existence with farming, Fraser is a proud man who is loyal to his Chief.

Fraser

In 1746, his Chief tells him to go fight for the Roman Catholic Charles Edward Stuart (aka Bonnie Prince Charlie) who wants to fight the British Army and make a claim to the English throne.

Fraser

Fraser goes, but Charles’ dream ends on the boggy, bloody fields of Culloden on 16 April when the British slaughter them.

Fraser

It is here that Fraser first meets General James Wolfe who takes a shot at Fraser and misses, and Fraser, holding his broadsword, takes a swing at James and missed as well.

Fraser

After the Scots are defeated, a new British policy tries to dismantle the Highland Clans ancient culture by banning the wearing of the tartan plaid, removing the semi-feudal bonds of military service and destroying the power of the Chiefs.

Fraser

But ten years later the British need soldiers. They promise old clans they could wear their tartans on their bottom half as long as they wore a British redcoat on their top.

Fraser

Knowing the cause of the Catholic Stuart’s was forever lost, and loving a good fight, Fraser joins up.

Fraser

He gets along with most everyone – Sargent Harris, Polly, Bram and Cyrus… but has his troubles with General James Wolfe and Pike Robinson.

Fraser

After the battle, Fraser will live in Quebec and marry a French Canadian.

Gabriel Hannenorak
Gabriel Hannenorak

Gabriel Hannenorak is born in 1742 in Jeune Lorette, a Huron-Wendat village and Jesuit mission, 11 km outside the town of Quebec.

Gabriel Hannenorak

His father is a highly respected Wendat warrior but he is killed in the Battle of Fort William Henry in 1757.

Gabriel Hannenorak

His mother, Elizabeth Otsinionk8ara, is a midwife who helps women at the village and from all over Quebec. She is often summoned to handle difficult births.

Gabriel Hannenorak

Though Gabriel and his mother practise aspects of the Catholic religion, they mainly rely on their own culture and spirituality.

Gabriel Hannenorak

Until the mid-1700’s, their ancestors occupied a vast territory straddling the Great Lakes area and the Saint Lawrence corridor through the Gaspésie peninsula and the Gulf.

Gabriel Hannenorak

In 1650, partly weakened by disease brought by Europeans and with the continual attacks of the Haudenosaunee, some Huron-Wendat leave the Lake Simcoe area in Ontario and decide to return to their ancestral land in the Quebec City region after organizing their arrival by sending emissaries to their French allies.

Gabriel Hannenorak

After moving their village many times, they finally settle in Jeune Lorette in 1697 where they hunt, fish and farm.

Gabriel Hannenorak

As well, many of them are excellent crafts people and make canoes, snowshoes, moccasins and handiwork to sell to the French.

Gabriel Hannenorak

Gabriel is very close with Ginette and often gives her corn for her cow, Mudpie.

Gabriel Hannenorak

His best friend is Henri.

Gabriel Hannenorak

He’s always kind to Solange and friendly to everyone including Madame De La FontaineMadame PoirierFrançoisSister Saint TheresaLouis-Joseph De Montcalm and his Horse.

Gabriel Hannenorak

 All his young life, Gabriel trains to be a warrior and the arrival of the English gives him the opportunity to fulfill his dream..

Gabriel Hannenorak

but first he must confront personal heartbreak, political intransigence and divided loyalties before the possibility of his own death ignites in him a vision of his Nation’s future.

Henri
Henri

Henri is born and raised on a farm in Quebec, the only cherished child of his parents. Lively, friendly – everyone likes Henri.

Henri

His mother is possessive and loving. Like his father, Henri sees his life unfolding around his farm, his church and his community.

Henri

Life is hard – brutally hard at times – but that is the cost of being part of a new country, new to France, that is.

Henri

He plans to marry Ginette. He often helps her with her cow Mudpie.

Henri

He has close friends like Paschal, Gabriel Hannenorak, and is intrigued with François, the French soldier who boards at his farm.

Henri

He knows all the nuns and Sister Saint Theresa is more like an aunt to him, than anything else.

Henri

He helps Solange with her Sow & Piglets and often helps the priest and also Josephine, the Baker. Henri loves his Rooster.

Henri

When his father is killed at the Battle of Carillon in 1758, Henri becomes part of the Canadian Militia and although knows he will fight to the death to protect New France,

Henri

Henri is as far away from the world of Lieutenant General Louis-Joseph De Montcalm, Madame De La Fontaine and Madame Poirier as he is from the moon.

Henri

Just when he thinks his life is going exactly as planned, Henri is blindsided by a totally unexpected betrayal.

Henri

Like many of his generation, he will die on the Plains of Abraham, perhaps not knowing that what he fights for in 1759 will flourish well into the 21st century and beyond.

Pike Robinson
Pike Robinson

Pike Robinson is from Massachusetts. His family owns a lot of black slaves and a lot of land… and they want more of both. 

Pike Robinson

Their only obstacle is the fact that the French ‘own’ the lands west of the Ohio River down through Detroit and into New Orleans.

Pike Robinson

British settlers who live in the Thirteen Colonies are eager to push west. They are less interested in trading with Indigenous Nations and more interested in grabbing the land. Some Indigenous people call these settlers ‘Land-Eaters’.

Pike Robinson

Pike’s grandfather is killed in 1704 during the Deerfield Raid when French Canadians, Abenaki,Mohawk and Huron-Wendat warriors as well as members of the Pocumtac Nation – who originally lived in the Deerfield area – attack the palisaded town of Deerfield.

Pike Robinson

A military officer from France, Jean-Baptiste Hertel de Rouville, leads the attack. Over 50 settlers are killed and over 100 are taken back to Montreal as captives.

Pike Robinson

Although born around 1737, Pike’s anger and fear of First Nations grows out of his family’s history and his society.

Pike Robinson

In 1703, the bounty on ‘Indian scalps’ in Massachusetts is equivalent to 18 dollars each.

Pike Robinson

The only way Pike sees to get more land is to get rid of the French and their allies, so he joins up with the British Army.

Pike Robinson

He doesn’t like General James Wolfe and calls him ‘The Nose’.

Pike Robinson

Pike likes to shoot seagulls, and he likes Bram but also tries to poison him.

Pike Robinson

He rebels against the rigidity of British army protocol, making enemies of Brigadiers Townshend, Murray and Monckton, Sargent Harris and Cyrus.

Pike Robinson

He admires Fraser and has stars in his eyes for Polly, but Polly has no time for the ‘grabber’.

Pike Robinson

Pike’s rabble-rousing ways don’t give him much traction when he’s wounded during a battle just west of the Montmorency and lands in the hospital under the laser eyes of Sister Saint Elpidius.

Rooster
Rooster

Originally from the French colony of Saint-Dominique (now Haiti), this 4-year-old rooster belongs to Henri’s farm.

Rooster

Henri calls him ‘Crazy Thing’ for he is bossy and loud.

Horse
Horse

This 6-year-old ‘Canadian horse’ has power, endurance and grace.

Horse

Her name is Estelle but her owners keep changing. 

Horse

At first she belongs to Vaudreuil then she will belong to Gabriel Hannenorak then to Montcalm

Horse

King Louis XIV sent the first load of twelve horses to New France from his haras – National Studs – in 1665 via ship.

Great Grey Owl
Great Grey Owl

Native to the Northern Hemisphere this 15-year-old owl has spent her life in southern Quebec.

Great Grey Owl

Elusive, often quiet, she possesses extraordinary hearing. 

Great Grey Owl

This breed is often called Phantom of the North.

Moose
Moose

Native to the boreal forests in Quebec, this bull moose is 6 years old.

Moose

He’s a solitary creature with poor eyesight but a good nose, and occasionally he’s very curious.

Moose

Sometimes, when he is surprised or excited, he will dance.

Dog
Dog

This affectionate 3-year-old English foxhound hails from Scotland.

Dog

In 1758, a friend of James Wolfe gave him this foxhound because he knew James loves dogs.

Dog

Delighted, Wolfe named the foxhound Bram and brought him along when he sailed to Quebec.

Seagull
Seagull

Noisy, brazen and brave, this 7-year-old seagull has lived on and around the St. Lawrence since birth.

Seagull

Resourceful, she’ll grab food right out of your hand or even prey on a live whale.

Seagull

She mated for life but her partner was attacked and eaten by a dog.

Seagull

Seagulls enjoy being in a mob.

Red Fox
Red Fox

Native to the entire Northern Hemisphere, this 4-year-old has a vocal range that spans five octaves and possesses a soft, silken red coat.

Red Fox

She is smart, playful and will eat anything.

Red Fox

Quebec farmers dislike her for she preys on their baby lambs and chickens.

White-Tailed Deer
White-Tailed Deer

This 4-year-old buck is playful but aggressive.

White-Tailed Deer

He sports a pair of handsome antlers as he ranges just north of Quebec.

White-Tailed Deer

The pupils of his eyes are horizontally slit to allow for good vision at night and colour vision during the day.

Canadienne Cow
Canadienne Cow

She is 4 years old and belongs to Ginette’s family.

Canadienne Cow

Ginette named her Mudpie. 

Canadienne Cow

In early 1700’s domesticated cows from Normandy and Brittany were brought to New France to originate the only Canadian breed of cows—the Canadienne.

Cat
Cat

This beautiful 2-year-old cat was brought from Paris to Quebec in 1759 by Bougainville and given as a gift to Montcalm.

Cat

Montcalm named the cat Minou.

Red-Throated Loon
Red-Throated Loon

This beautiful bird with its distinctive call is 6 years old.

Red-Throated Loon

According to many myths, the loon was asked by a great shaman to bring up earth from the bottom of the sea. 

Red-Throated Loon

The earth was then used to build the world’s dry land. 

Red-Throated Loon

Though rarely seen on fast moving water, this loon has made its temporary home on the St. Lawrence River.

Sow and Piglets
Sow and Piglets

This 2-year-old sow is from France.

Sow and Piglets

She travelled across the Atlantic in early 1759 aboard the Chézine, one of the last ships to arrive in Quebec from France.

Sow and Piglets

The Piglets were all born in New France.

Sow and Piglets

Solange, Ginette’s aunt, has a particular obsession with pigs.