“The Mistress of Bonaventure” by Harold Bindloss is an adventure novel set in the rugged Canadian wilderness, where the protagonist, a strong and determined woman, inherits a family legacy tied to the logging industry. The story follows her as she navigates the challenges of frontier life, where survival is a daily struggle against the elements and the harsh realities of the natural landscape. As the mistress of Bonaventure, she must prove her mettle in a male-dominated world, dealing with conflicts that arise from the demands of managing the logging operations, while, maintaining her own integrity. Romance weaves through the narrative, adding complexity to her relationships with those around her. The novel explores themes of determination, character development, and the pioneering spirit, capturing the essence of early 20th-century literature with its vivid depictions of the Canadian frontier and the trials faced by those who sought to tame it.
Harold Edward Bindloss was an English novelist who published a number of adventure tales set in western Canada, as well as in England and West Africa. His writing was mostly based on his own experiences as a seaman, dock worker, farmer, and planter. Bindloss was born on April 6, 1866 in Wavertree, Liverpool, England. The eldest son of Edward Williams Bindloss, an iron dealer who employed six men at the time of the 1881 census. Bindloss has three sisters and four brothers. He spent several years at sea and in several colonies, most notably in Africa, before returning to England in 1896, his health ravaged by malaria. He appears to have started out as a clerk in a shipping office, but, this did not suit his adventurous nature, and he later became a farmer in Canada, a sailor, a dock worker, and a planter. He returned to England in 1896, likely from West Africa, afflicted with malaria. Given that he spent more than a decade at sea and in the colonies, it is likely that his time overseas was divided into two parts: first as a youth, and then as a young man after 1891.