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Recommended history books - Quebec province
Okay, so this is a shot in the dark. As a history buff, I normally have some historical context for the places I visit. I admit I'm heading off to Quebec City totally unprepared. This is (for me) sort of a last-minute trip. However, I find a sense of the history of a place greatly enhances my travels.
Can anyone recommend elementary-but-interesting background reading for me? I must sound like a real dink. Sorry and thanks for any recs. |
I can highly recommend "Sacre Blues: An Unsentimental Journey Through Quebec" by Taras Grescoe.
If you can get your hands on that paperback, you're set for not only Quebec City, but the whole province. I highly, <i>highly</i> recommend it. :) |
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The free Quebec City guide book available thru bounjourquebec (and at many hotels)has some good info as to historic spots to visit.
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Thank you both very much!
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I also recommend Gascoe's book for insights into Quebec--however it is not a book with a lot of history of the province or Q City
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Vttraveler makes a good point.
I feel that Grescoe's book really enriches ones experience in Quebec because you actually understand the culture, which is a product of its history. For real Quebec City history, you can always read up on the historical context online at sites such as these... http://www.quebecheritage.com/en/historique.html http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quebec_City#History ... and then soak it up at the museums around the Plains of Abraham once you arrive there. You may also want to read up in the Battle of the Plains of Abraham: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_...ins_of_Abraham and the subsequent painting of the Death of General Wolfe. The Ursuline nuns of Québec also played a major role in early Québec City history: http://faculty.marianopolis.edu/c.be...becHistory.htm I did study Canadian history and Québecois literature, but unfortunately can't recommend any real history book on Québec City. Fortunately, that kind of info is readily accessible once you arrive there (in the same way that Boston history is readily available all over Boston). |
OK: it is not exclusively about Quebec City, nor is it a history book as such. BUT, if you can get past that, you might want to add Mordecai Richler's 'Solomon Gursky Was Here' to your reading list.
Some claim it is Richler's best and that is high praise. Even if you disagree about its' literary merits, it is a wonderful, rich tale of the early days of Canadian history skillflly blended with contemporary detail of Quebec life. |
Interesting. Thank you all. Yes, I'm a history *and* a literature lover. Once upon a time I knew about King Philip's War in New England, so native/colonial relations and conflicts are of particular interest. And religious and intellectual history.
Now I'm almost sorry my trip is so soon because I don't have time to do proper research and keep my day job. |
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