
Hi. How is everybody doing? Gosh we are almost into September now. It’s hard to believe, how time flies. I plan to do my September Preview post next time so stay tuned for that. Meanwhile I had a good time visiting my parents in Southern Cal and got home okay after the tropical storm there. Now I’ve been back home about a week.
This past weekend we had an interesting visitor stop by — a Great Horned Owl sitting in a tree near our tool shed. He stayed all day and now sadly he is gone. We hope he returns. He is known to be a formidable predator and we think he’ll find plenty of mice and gophers in our back fields. It was fun to watch him swivel his head around 180 degrees while keeping an eye on us spying on him. I love to see owls, which are often so elusive to find, so this was a big treat for us. Do you think owls are mostly good or bad omens in literature?
And now I’ll leave you with a couple of reviews of what I finished lately.
Lucky Red by Claudia Cravens / Dial Press / 304 pages / 2023

4+ stars. I didn’t know what to expect going in to this novel, but it is a Western set on the American frontier about a young woman’s coming of age in a Dodge City brothel, her changes and the relations she makes there, and the revenge she seeks on a few who come to betray her.
Bridget with her long red hair is recruited to be a sex worker at the popular Buffalo Queen bar and brothel by two madams. Soon enough she’s making her way turning tricks with the male clientele and becomes good friends with Constance the bookish sporting girl with the room next door. But later a marriage proposal by an important customer and an attraction to an alluring female gunslinger send Bridget’s heart aflutter and she soon discovers what real intimacy is all about.
This page-turning debut has some compelling turns and twists and wonderful touches of life within the Buffalo Queen for a girl like Bridget, who grew up in poverty and whose parents died early on. It’s not an easy life and violence and theft are always a bit close at hand. The independent and spirited Bridget learns some lessons the hard way and you root for her to be strong and turn the tide. In the end the story goes out with guns a blazing on a dangerous mission as Bridget, Constance and one of the brothel madams head into an impending snowstorm after an unforeseen attack at the Buffalo Queen. You’ll want to see what happens. Kudos to author Claudia Cravens on this lively and bold debut. She’s a writer to watch.
Thanks to the publisher the Dial Press and NetGalley for a complimentary copy to read and review.
The Outlander by Gil Adamson / House of Anansi / 408 pages / 2007

5 stars. I finally got around to reading this 2007 Canadian classic that had long been on my shelves. Duh, why did I wait so long? And the reason I picked it up now was for my book club, which is discussing it in September. Thank goodness I was pushed to get to it as I think it’s a real gem.
It’s a slow burn read set in 1903 about a woman who has been “widowed by her own hand” and is now fleeing across the western wilderness to escape her twin brothers-in-law who are tracking her to bring her to justice and revenge their loss. Little by little you come to understand why Mary Boulton, age 19, did what she did: the grief over the loss of a child, an unhappy marriage, and a staggering depression. She was half mad (for good reason) and now is on the run in the mountains.
Along the way she has various adventures trying to survive: meeting a wilderness hermit known as the Ridgerunner (William Moreland) who wins her trust and love; being shown the way forward by an Indian named Henry; and moving on to the mining hamlet of Frank, Alberta, where she befriends the winsome Reverend Bonnycastle, and experiences a catastrophic natural disaster. All the while the twins are still trying to find and get her. Run Mary, run.
Some readers might find the novel a bit too slow burn for them, but I seemed to love the story’s details… which adds much richness in its historical setting and the natural world that Mary is escaping through. It’s also revealing in its depiction of Mary’s character and what’s going through her suffering head … and those she meets along her escape route. Adamson writes so well and leverages the gradual suspense to a rousing and agreeable conclusion. I can’t wait to read her follow-up 2020 novel The Ridgerunner sometime this fall. I hear it’s another winner.
That’s all for now. What about you — have you read these novels and if so, what did you think?