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February 2003
ISBN 1-55380-005-2
BISAC: FIC000000,
FIC 019000,
FIC 014000
6 x 9
242 pp, $19.95 pb
Novel
Hawaiians, Northwest Coast

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When Eagles Call
By Susan Dobbie
In this historical novel,
Susan Dobbie takes us inside the world of Kimo Kanui, a
young Kanaka man who leaves his native Hawaii in the early
nineteenth century at a time when thousands of his people
were leaving to find work abroad. Dobbie portrays Kimo
signing on with the Hudson's Bay Company and being sent as a
labourer to Fort Langley on the banks of the Fraser River. When
Eagles Call offers a rich and colourful account of daily
life with the Company on the Pacific Northwest, with its
long days of harsh work, its exotic voyageurs and its
troubled relationships with the Native peoples who are
sometimes friendly but often suspicious and hostile. For
Kimo, the new life proves transformative as he grows to
enjoy life "on the edge." He survives an Indian
attack on the fort and the accidental fire that burns the
stockade to the ground. He encounters the wild men of the
fur brigades and is awed by the great salmon runs along the
river. He becomes deeply involved with the natives through
his growing love for the half-Kwantlen, half-French Canadian
woman, Rose Fanon, and when her life is threatened by
marauders, he breaks Company rules to rescue her. As his
attachment to Rose and the land grows, he foresees a time
when the Company will no longer control the territory, when
men can freely trade and lay claim to the land. At the
novel's close, war seems imminent as Britain disputes
America's claim to the Oregon Territory, and Kimo faces the
most difficult challenge of all - to return to the safety
and sun of Hawaii, or remain in this dangerously beautiful
new land with Rose.
"When Eagles Call is a
novel of adventure and romance - and also of surprises, as
Dobbie tells the little known story of the Hawaiians' role
in the development of British Columbia in the early
nineteenth century. Readers will come to admire and love
Kimo the Kanaka who leaves his islands of sunlight and
warmth to become a faithful "servant" of the
Hudson's Bay Company and then finds himself transformed by
the rainforest and the native peoples of the Fraser and the
Columbia." — Lloyd Abbey, author of the best selling
The Last Whales
Susan Dobbie was born and
educated in Edinburgh, Scotland. After immigrating to
Canada, she worked with her husband in the family business
and raised three children. She received her B.A. from Simon
Fraser University as a mature student and for ten years has
worked as a volunteer docent at the Langley Centennial
Museum, where she gained an in-depth understanding of the
early Hawaiians living on the Northwest Coast. When Eagles
Call is her first novel. She lives in Langley and at
Harrison Lake, BC.
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