From Kirkus Reviews:
Second-novelist O'Brien (The Spirit of the Hills, 1988) offers a high plains melodrama in which finely seen landscape--plus the interaction of character with place--more than makes up for some programmatic plotting. Larry Sorensen, bank president in Harney, South Dakota, is approached by a mining company that discovers gold near the Badlands. Sorensen moves to buy up the four ranches--one owned by Cleve Miller, who, repulsed by the modern, greedy world, has developed a conspiracy theory involving Zionism. The story then fills us in on the lives of the other three ranchers: Ross Brady, in his mid-30s, who deserted the Vietnam-era Army and came to South Dakota for ``the bigness, the stark beauty,'' even though his Jewish wife Linda left him for California. (Brother-in-law Stewart, however, the wild card in the deck, is still around.) Elizabeth Janis, of Dakota lineage, has inherited another ranch from its former owner, now paralyzed; she and Stewart get it on, and Stewart raises Cleve's ire by paying off Janis's mortgage. Tuffy Martinez, the fourth rancher, leases out his land and spends most of his time drunk. Author O'Brien treats us to nicely textured instances of brandings, blizzards, and ranching ups and downs before letting Cleve finish off the plot. Cleve watches Tippy die after an accident, then beats up Stewart and kidnaps him. Sorensen grapples with Cleve, who shoots him, whereupon Ross blows Cleve away. For the most part, then, things work out for the best, with the land being the novel's real protagonist. O'Brien once again goes for the jugular with too much violence, but his love of the land, along with his intimate knowledge of it, makes for a book that belongs on the shelf of every fan of serious western literature. -- Copyright ©1991, Kirkus Associates, LP. All rights reserved.
From Publishers Weekly:
In this eminently readable, often moving novel, O'Brien ( Rites of Autumn ) captures the ambience of the contemporary West, fashioning characters who take hold of the reader's imagination and don't let go. Harneyok , S.Dak., is a small town on the edge of the Badlands, where harsh living conditions challenge inhabitants. The story line follows the attempts of local bank president Larry Sorenson to acquire the four struggling cattle ranches that have access to the vein of gold newly discovered by a mining company. O'Brien's memorable cast includes Ross Brady, owner of the ranch owners, a Vietnam war deserter putting his life back together; Elizabeth Janis, the Indian woman trying to keep her ranch going while caring for its paralyzed former owner; Tuffy Martinez, a hard-drinking Indian fighting the demons of lost love and alcoholism; Cleve Miller, a nearly bankrupt rancher whose fanatical anti-Semitism is activated by the arrival of Brady's brother-in-law. Events build to a violent and shattering resolution, but the heart and soul of this absorbing tale reside in the framing sections, where O'Brien speaks directly to the reader of "all that is under the surface of this country of ours."
Copyright 1991 Reed Business Information, Inc.
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