J Macdonald Oxley
I'm not sure what's going on here, but the image does remind me of this iconic cover:
I read Bear as a twenty-year-old, and have not revisited.
Do the two novels have much in common?
Doubt it. North Overland was Franklin was first published by the Religious Tract Society. My copy features this bookplate:
I'm a bit peeved. As a boy, my father, an Anglican, was awarded many books for regularity and punctuality at the Church of St John the Baptist, Pointe Claire, Quebec. Walter Scott's The Black Arrow was one, but the novel that made he greatest impression was Number 44 by Harold M Sherman.
Not only that, my father was presented pins recognizing these accomplishment to be worn proudly on his lapel.
I too was raised an Anglican. Regularity and punctuality were not rewarded at my childhood church – St Marys, Kirkland, Quebec – though we children enjoyed juice and cookies after Sunday School.
The 2011 Canadian Census records George Bee (born 1895) as the eldest son of David and Catherine Bee. The Bee family lived at 240 Gerrard Street, now home to the Virginia Hamara Law Office.
But then it would've been South Overland with Franklin, right?
To be fair – to myself – I wasn't far off. The hero of North Overland with Franklin is the very same John Franklin, though Oxley's adventure imagines the explorer's ill-fated Coppermine Expedition, which ended over three decades before his ill-fated Northwest Passage Expedition began.
Because the former featured a murder, dinners made of boiled boots, and suggestions of cannibalism, North Overland with Franklin might make for an interesting read; remember, it began as a Religious Tract Society publication.
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