Laura Frantz is a Christy Award winner and the ECPA bestselling author of fifteen novels, including The Rose and the Thistle, The Frontiersman’s Daughter, Courting Morrow Little, The Lacemaker, and A Heart Adrift. She is the proud mom of an American soldier and a career firefighter.

In this interview, Laura shares some of her thoughts regarding her latest novel, The Seamstress of Acadie.

FF: Can you please provide a brief summary of your novel, The Seamstress of Acadie?
Sylvie Galant and her Acadian family are caught between the warring French and English on Nova Scotia’s rugged, contested shores. When she encounters renowned enemy and Army Ranger William Blackburn, he warns her that the British are poised to invade. Rather than participate in the heinous expulsion, he resigns his commission before a charge of treason is brought against him. Soon Sylvie loses all she’s ever known as the British expel the Acadians from their homeland and land her in Virginia. Bereft of family and friends, she encounters William once again, and they must work through the complex tangle of their shared, shattered past to navigate the present and forge an enduring future.

FF: What was the inspiration for your novel?
I’ve always been fascinated by Acadian history, which is the most heartbreaking I’ve ever researched. I was disappointed to find few novels that deal with Acadie, which, aside from Longfellow’s poem Evangeline, seems to have been buried since the eighteenth-century expulsion.

FF: Your two protagonists, Sylvie Galant and William Blackburn, are on opposing sides in Le Grand Dérangement of 1755. How did they first meet?
Sylvie and William have a rather charming first meeting by a well in Acadie that is based on a bit of subterfuge and secrecy. Their attraction is instant and mutual, as it so often is inexplicably even in real life.

FF: Sylvie and William later find themselves on ships headed to Virginia. Can you provide a brief summary of the events leading up to their departure from Acadie?
Acadie, present-day Nova Scotia, had long been a battleground between the French and English since its founding in 1604. The conflict worsened in the eighteenth century as each nation fought over contested territory. In 1755, the Acadians were deprived of their weapons, detained as prisoners, and then forced onto ships to destinations unknown. In the novel, William leaves Acadie first with his Rangers on a sloop in late summer 1755 before the deportation of the Acadians begins. Sylvie follows on a ramshackle transport ship in early fall.

FF: What led to William’s decision to resign from the British army?
William has a profound change of heart and purpose. A spiritual awakening as a prisoner of war among the French led to an about-face in terms of his military career, culminating in his refusal to take part in the Acadians’ deportation.

FF: Prior to the British invasion of Acadie, Sylvie Galant was a seamstress. How did her profession play a part in your story?
Each of us is gifted with the ability to do certain things well. Sylvie is no different. Since childhood, she has plied her needle in a way that causes other people to take notice. To her, it is just routine until she begins to see her skill as a means to navigate her new, unwanted life in a hostile land. Personally, I grew up with a grandmother who was an accomplished seamstress and sewed my clothes, even historical garments. I don’t sew myself but am in awe of those who do!

FF: Can you please describe the setting for your novel and why this is important in the overall plot?
If you visit Nova Scotia, you soon realize why the British fought hard to win it and why the Acadians took strong measures to keep it. Epic in scope and beauty with forests and fields and mountains, coastlines and islands, it’s truly a one-of-a-kind place and makes the ideal novel setting. I hope readers experience some of that beauty within the novel’s pages.

FF: What are some of the themes found within The Seamstress of Acadie?
Love, loss, trust, new beginnings. Life is one of continual change. How we navigate those changes is a constant challenge both in fiction and in real life.

FF: What do you hope readers will experience when reading your novel?
That beauty can be seen amid the heartbreaking history and cause us to look at the heartaches and hurdles we face today in a different light.

The Seamstress of Acadie
A Historical Romance Novel of Fleeing War and New Beginnings Set in 1750’s Canada
Laura Frantz
Revell
Genres: Historical Romance
Release Date: January 9, 2024

ISBN-10: ‎0800740688
ISBN-13: ‎978-0800740689

Book Summary:
Gifted seamstress Sylvie Galant and her Acadian family desire to live peacefully and remain neutral in the upcoming war between the French and the English. But the proximity of their land on Acadie’s rugged shores makes them an easy target. While tensions escalate, Sylvie encounters Major William Blackburn. Although he is a British Army Ranger, Blackburn warns her that the British are poised to invade. But the warning cannot counteract the plans or stop the tide of English soldiers.

William Blackburn has seen firsthand the atrocities that the British have done to the Acadian families and their villages. Rather than participate in the heinous expulsion, Will resigns his commission before a charge of treason is brought against him.

When Sylvie is forcibly removed from her homeland, she finds herself on a ramshackle ship headed to Virginia, where she crosses paths once again with Will. Together they must work through the complex tangle of their shared, shattered past to navigate the present and forge an enduring future.

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About The Author

Laura Frantz is a Christy Award finalist and the ECPA bestselling author of several books, including The Frontiersman's Daughter, Courting Morrow Little, The Colonel's Lady, The Mistress of Tall Acre, A Moonbow Night, and The Ballantyne Legacy series. She lives and writes in a log cabin in the heart of Kentucky.