Fire Ship

Front Cover
The Porcupine's Quill, 1992 - Juvenile Nonfiction - 119 pages

Thirteen-year-old Dan Dobson and his family have just immigrated to Upper Canada from the American States when the War of 1812 flares up. Their neighbours in the town of York -- today's Toronto -- suspect them of spying for the Americans, but the Dobsons are loyal to Britain and determined to remain in York. Dan's dream is to sail with the British frigate Sir Isaac Brock which he and his father are helping to build. He sees war as an exciting adventure -- that is until he gets his first taste of battle on the day the American forces invade York.

Fire Ship is a fast-moving historical novel for young people that brings the War of 1812 to life in a way that only Marianne Brandis can. The attention to detail and acute historical sensibility that so distinguished Brandis's `Emma' trilogy are in full evidence once again. From the opening scene of Fire Ship in which Dan paddles across the silent bay towards Toronto Island to the graphic scenes of cannon fire and rough military doctoring in Fort York, Brandis invites us to experience Toronto exactly as it was in 1813. She also introduces us to a strong new character in Dan who grapples with issues of loyalty and nationality and the brutality of war. `The story must work as a story; it must not be a sugar-coated history lesson,' Brandis says of her approach to historical fiction. `My goal is to give fiction the verisimilitude of fact, and to touch fact with the colour and vivacity of fiction.'

 

Selected pages

Contents

Section 1
5
Section 2
7
Section 3
11
Section 4
23
Section 5
35
Section 6
43
Section 7
45
Section 8
67
Section 10
77
Section 11
85
Section 12
90
Section 13
96
Section 14
99
Section 15
111
Section 16
113
Copyright

Section 9
71

Common terms and phrases

About the author (1992)

Marianne Brandis was born in the Netherlands in 1938 and came to Canada in 1947. She has lived in British Columbia, Nova Scotia, and Ontario, and has worked as a writer for radio as well as teaching English at Ryerson Polytechnical University in Toronto. Her work was first published in the 1960s and she has been a full-time writer since 1989. She now lives in Stratford, Ontario.