Picked this one up in the free bin. If I'm being charitable, it's a cautionary tale about marrying too quickly for lust instead of waiting for someone you click with on multiple levels. The writing is reasonably solid, but the ending is not really satisfying.
Less charitably, Dave is an awful person who creates problems for himself. He assaults a woman, marries someone he doesn't actually like, quickly tires of her, allows her verbally and emotionally abusive mother to move in with them, then brings an orphan into their home (without consulting his wife) to try to "fix" her, when that goes badly in the worst way, he uses it as the vindication he needs to cheat on his wife, and when these things come back to bite him, he acts like he's being assailed by outside forces instead of really admitting how much he screwed up.
This is one of those books where the main character sort of drifts through his own life most of the time, so the peripheral characters are more interesting than he is. There's the charming sociopath Algeria, the unfortunate Edith, the lovely Julia, who really deserves a better story, and Gotch McCurdy, who manages to be both hero and villain. The slow build eventually pays off with some action and drama. But again, the ending just seems to fall a bit flat.
Particularly given Julia's big revelation at the end and the amount of time spent on the town, Jericho still feels more like a force of nature that Dave must struggle against/for, than a collection of people with their own goals. I'm a little divided on whether that works in the context, since Dave's political career is a big focus and general opinion is more important than individual opinion to a politician.
Not a painful read, had a few moments. If I recommended it, it would be as part of a general study on period attitudes (published 1947, story take place early 1900s and stretches over a decades or so) and sexism.