“This is one of those perfect books that makes it difficult to pick up anything else afterwards.
Though it’s a novel, this is a nice companion book to James Galvin’s classic, the Meadow. You could almost think of it as part II as the time is closer to the present, and the end of the Meadow, at which point open land is being parceled and essentially destroyed, is the beginning of this book.
The book has an almsot Edward Abbey feel to it in terms of the changing landscape and different groups fighting over the same area. But where Abbey’s concepts and ideas rise to the top, overpowering his writing style, James Galvin treats each word with the same care and warmth that he gives to his overarching theme.
Another great writer, Tom Spanbauer, says that every writer has to do three things with readers: “Teach them something, make them laugh, and break their hearts.” This book will teach you about ranching and the American West, make you laugh your ass off with character descriptions and wild tales, and if it doesn’t break your heart, your blood must be pumping through something harder than the granite under Wyoming’s soil.”