Zane Grey; I can’t get
enough of his books. I used to hate their slightly cheesy plots and
over-emphasized attention to the details of setting and landscape, but these
days I find something strangely attractive about the less than perfect prose.
Zane Grey had a style all his own that keeps me returning again and again to
his western novels.
In this particular
novel, Riders of the Purple Sage, an
unmarried Mormon woman, Jane Withersteen, is determined to be independent and
run her own ranch after the death of her father. Disagreements with the town elders
expose her to rustlers and violence. In the midst of her problems, Lassiter, an
infamous man of violence comes to the town, searching for the grave of a woman
Jane was very close to. Lassiter allies himself with Jane and signs on to her
payroll to help her protect her property and the lives of her hired men. Like
many of Zane Grey’s novels, Riders of the
Purple Sage tackles both romance and the moral dilemmas encountered in both
love and violence. It is a prime example of why a hundred years later readers
are still picking up the works of Zane Grey.
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