

How big was this New World? Was it just a narrow strip of land between the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans? In 1670 no one knew the answers to these questions. Perhaps the settlers on the east coast were too busy to spend much time wondering?
It was not so with Jacques Marquette, the missionary from France. Almost as great as his love for the New World was his curiosity about it. Wondering about its size was not enough for him. He set out to learn for himself. From the Indians he discovered that there was a Big River to the west. Perhaps this Big River, that some tribes called the Mississippi, emptied into the Pacific Ocean. If he found that it did, what a great discovery that would be!
Jim Kjelgaard, in The Explorations of Pere Marquette, tells the story of the missionary's travels and discoveries. Along with it he gives us vivid pictures of life among the Indians. Traveling with Pere Marquette are the laughing, hardy voyageurs whose knowledge and skill made his explorations possible. Here, too, is Louis Joliet, Marquette's good friend and companion in discovery.
The exploration of the Mississippi River by Marquette and Joliet was a long step forward in the growing knowledge of the New World. To read about it in Jim Kjelgaard's story is to relive the wonder that the discoverers must have felt as they pushed their canoes down waterways that had never before been seen by white men.
Book 1

Book 10

Book 11

Book 12

Book 13

Book 17

Book 19

Book 2

Book 20

Book 23

Book 24

Book 26

Book 28

Book 30

Book 31

Book 32

Book 33

Book 34

Book 35

Book 36

Book 37

Book 38

Book 39

Book 4

Book 40

Book 41

Book 42

Book 43

Book 46

Book 49

Book 5

Book 51

Book 52

Book 53

Book 54

Book 55

Book 57

Book 58

Book 6

Book 60

Book 61

Book 62

Book 66

Book 67

Book 68

Book 69

Book 7

Book 70

Book 71

Book 74

Book 75

Book 77

Book 79

Book 8

Book 80

Book 81

Book 82

Book 83

Book 84

Book 85

Book 87

Book 91

Book 92

Book 93

Book 94

Book 95

Book 96

Book 97

Book 98

Book 99

Nothing here
¯\_(ツ)_/¯