"Hi Marie ...
"Received the Cajun By Any Other Name books. My family was very anxious to get one, now they all have one, it was so professionally well-written. I was so happy when I received it. Now, my family are learning all about their ancestors. Thanks for writing this book, it's so very interesting, we can't put it down. Your book " Cajun By Any Other Name " is being read with enthusiasm, from New England to British Columbia ...very interesting and impressive ..." Emile Broome (New Hampshire, USA) "Hi Marie:
"I was reading through your book, Cajun By Any Other Name, again, and it made me think about just how intertwined my ancestry is with yours, along with every other person of Acadian- Mi'kmaq ancestry. One, I was thinking of was my grandfather Honore' Trahan. He was captured by the English in Maine, and was listed as Mi'kmaq. He was deported to Port Tobacco, Maryland, and left for Louisiana with his family including another of my grandfathers, Blaise Lejeune, who was Honore's orphaned nephew. Their ship got blown off course and ended up in Texas where they were held prisoner for six months before being allowed to go to Louisiana. "I remember reading about an ancestor of yours from Martinique. It is kind of neat because my grandfather Michel Doucet and his family, after being released from the Halifax prison, ended up in Haiti for a year before going to Louisiana. "And I know you have German and Swiss ancestors, which I do not, but I was really surprised to find out years ago about the huge impact the Germans had on the Cajun culture. I went to High School in La Place, Louisiana, in St John the Baptist Parish, which as you know is right in the middle of the German Coast. La Place is famous for its Andouille Festival, honoring a sausage that no Cajun would live without. It was interesting that andouille actually came from the Germans. And then there is of course the most Cajun of musical instruments, the accordion, another contribution of the Germans. "So it really does amaze me how all this ties together, then multiply that by the numbers who have similar ancestry. I really did enjoy your book." Keith Doucet (Louisiana, USA) New Book! Cajun By Any Other Name (2012) and Revisiting Anne Marie (2012) by Marie Rundquist3/3/2012
Announcement: Cajun By Any Other Name Recovering the Lost History of a Family and a People by Marie Rundquist. Published March, 2012.
Readers of Cajun By Any Other Name live the experience of Rundquist's Acadian ancestors...whose lives were shattered by a forced expulsion from Nova Scotia in 1755 - from their exile in Maryland and re-emergence in the Louisiana parishes - and join Rundquist's search for an identity nearly destroyed by re-tooled surnames, assumed pedigrees, ambition, courthouse filings and the Civil war. In conclusion, Rundquist exposes how DNA testing, genealogy and history research restore vital connections for others of Native American and European ancestry, makes a case for self-identification that rises above cultural labels and strengthens the soul.
Spanning two centuries, from the early 1600s to the mid-1700s,Revisiting Anne Marie engages the reader Revisiting Anne Marie...in the history of a Family cut from European and Amerindian (Mi'kmaq) cloth, from the family's brave beginnings in Nova Scotia to its exile in Snow Hill, Maryland, following the Grand Deportation of 1755. The story of Anne Marie's family comes to life with art, source citations and references, first-hand observations and photographs, as the author interweaves the inter-relationships that comprise Anne Marie's extended family in l'Acadie with the history and politics of the time. Through an overlay of new genetic information, the author challenges traditional perceptions, as she brings forth, generation by generation, the diverse society that becomes the foundation of our "American heritage." Read more...
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