Armand Durand

Armand Durand

by Rosanna Eleanor Leprohon

19 chapters7h 41mEnglish1868

About this book

Armand Durand, published in 1868, was written by Rosanna Leprohon, an English-speaker with an insider’s knowledge of French Canada, thanks to her Montreal education and marriage to a man from an old Québécois family. Paul Durand, a prosperous Québécois farmer, marries in quick succession two very different wives, and fathers two very different sons. The first son, Armand, delicate and bookish, is destined for a legal career in the city; the second, Paul Junior, tougher and down-to-earth, continues life on the farm. The story deals with troubling aspects of parental, sibling, and marital relationships. Armand Durand may be one of the best Canadian novels that no one has heard of. It was well received in both its English and French editions, but is today hard to find, especially in the original English. Silenced Sextet (1993), a study of 19th-century Canadian women authors whose works were initially popular but later slipped into obscurity, offers this assessment: “it is a mature novel, valuable for its complex human relationships and also for its glimpses of Montreal life in Leprohon’s own time and of rural Quebec life in somewhat earlier days.” - Summary by Bruce Pirie

Chapters (19)

1Chapter I
1177
2Chapter II
1420
3Chapter III
1325
4Chapter IV
1458
5Chapter V
1056
6Chapter VI
2537
7Chapter VII
1019
8Chapter VIII
1056
9Chapter IX
1291
10Chapter X
1089
11Chapter XI
1228
12Chapter XII
2384
13Chapter XIII
822
14Chapter XIV
1965
15Chapter XV
1458
16Chapter XVI
1885
17Chapter XVII
2177
18Chapter XVIII
1112
19Chapter XIX
1259

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