A rivetingly imagined re-telling of the voyages of Frances Barkley (1769–1845), who as a young woman travelled the world on a trading mission with her sea captain husband.
Over two hundred years ago, Frances Barkley, a seventeen-year-old girl fresh out of a convent school in France, met twenty-six-year-old sea captain, fell deeply in love, and married him after a six-week courtship. Five weeks later, she stepped aboard his ship, the Imperial Eagle, to set sail on an eight-year voyage that would take them around the world twice.
Frances Barkley’s story is a remarkable one. It is a story born of discovery, of firsts, of hardship, of disease, of illness, and of death. Relying on her strength of character and wit, this young woman survived fierce seas, shipwreck, and capture by pirates. When Frances was approaching her seventh decade, at the behest of her daughter, she put pen to paper and wrote down what she could remember of her life with her husband in the merchant sea trade. Frances Barkley: Eighteenth-century Seafarer is not simply a re-issue of Frances’s own reminiscences, but a work of creative non-fiction—an extensive reimagining of her time at sea, supplemented through extensive historical, geographic, and nautical research.
"Award-winning BC writer Cathy Converse provides a brisk, engaging and informative account of [Barkley's] life in Frances Barkley: Eighteenth-century Seafarer . . . Highly recommended."
—Vancouver Sun
“With a careful blend of researched fact and fiction, Cathy Converse brings Frances Barkley's epic eight-year global sea adventure to life. A compelling story of love, determination, and adventure during a pivotal era of maritime exploration at the dawn of globalization.”
—Stephen R. Bown, award-winning author of The Company: The Rise and Fall of the Hudson’s Bay Empire
"Converse provides historical background and contextual information . . . Her combination of careful research and clear, descriptive prose makes for an informative and highly readable account."
—BC Studies
“A rollicking true tale of love and the sea told without bravado by a most remarkable woman. Just as Frances Barkley wrote that she "never tired of being out of sight of land," the reader will never tire of her account of life aboard, piracy, the fur trade, mutiny, and exploring foreign countries.”
—R. Bruce Macdonald, author of Never Say P*g: The Book of Sailors' Superstitions and Sisters of the Ice: The True Story of How St. Roch and North Star of Herschel Island Protected Canadian Arctic Sovereignty
“The story of this astonishing woman is brought to life and given colour so that she is no longer a footnote to BC’s history. The sweeping dimension of her accomplishments makes this book engrossing and engaging. A welcome addition to the rich history of our nautical heritage.”
—John M. MacFarlane, FRGS, curator of the Nauticapedia Project and curator emeritus of the Maritime Museum of British Columbia
“A richly imagined re-telling of one woman’s glorious maritime odyssey around the world. Based on scrupulous research, the author conjures up Frances Barkley’s hazardous voyages with her fur-trader husband and young children to far flung destinations including the west coast of Canada, Alaska, China, India, and Siberia.”
—Joanna Kafarowski, author of The Polar Adventures of a Rich American Dame: A Life of Louise Arner Boyd