A good old-fashioned western that rings true in its depiction of a family trying to build a future in ranching in the cattle country of Colorado-Wyoming.
Make no mistake. This book spends a lot of time talking about cattle ranching. Nevertheless, I plowed through it, and for the most part enjoyed it. The pace and my relationship with the characters accelerated in the last 25 per cent of the book. I think I read a review of this book in the Denver Post Roundup email, and when I noticed that it took place in North Park, I put it on my Goodreads Want to Read list. Kelsey Cameron leaves behind his beloved Scotland and his love, Prim Munro, to seek his fortunes and a new life in the western region of the United States. Based on correspondence with his cousin, Tommy Cameron, he travels to the North Park area of Colorado. He begins his new life at the bottom as a manure slinger and fence mender. As he adapts to life in the stark surroundings of North Park, he corresponds with his girl friend, Prim, and he learns that she is pregnant with presumably his child. With the goal of bringing Prim to the U.S., Kelsey befriends Monte Maguire, the owner of three fairly expansive ranches as well as a large herd of cattle. The reader assumes that Monte is a man, but in an early meeting, we discover that Monte is a woman. I will stop there so as to avoid revealing more of the story. The author does a superb job of developing the main characters including the Camerons and all the ranch hands and characters that scratch out a living in the small community of North Park. This novel takes place at the turn of the previous century, and the author's descriptions allow one to imagine living in the harsh frontier environment of North Park with very few amenties. These were clearly tough people. The weather, the cattle, the importance of water, the mountains, and the depressing winters are expertly described. I am not sure there are more books by this author, but I would certainly sign up for another read.
I didn't expect a lot from this book, but it turned out to be a good old-fashioned western that rang true in its depiction of ranching in Colorado-Wyoming. The characters are interesting, and the plot flows. I really enjoyed it!
Old school story-telling--hard men, harder women against the bare plains of Colorado 1898. Great descriptions, characters that don't conform to stereotypes. A book to while away the afternoon.