Riders of the purple sage

374 pages

English language

Published Nov. 21, 1980

ISBN:
978-0-671-45791-4
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OCLC Number:
33630874

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4 stars (2 reviews)

Jane Withersteen ran her cattle business and bossed the cowboys who rode the expanse of purple sage around her prosperous Utah ranch. Then she dared to disobey the Mormons who ordered her to marry grim, brutal Elder Tull. Now her stock was being stampeded and her horses stolen. but in wasn't until her men started disappearing that Jane feared she was beat. Then the mysterious gunslinger called Lassiter rode into town. He came to kill a man. He stayed to fight for a woman ... in a showdown for freedom and love.

41 editions

reviewed Riders of the purple sage by Zane Grey (Oxford world's classics)

Review of 'Riders of the purple sage' on 'Goodreads'

3 stars

There's a long introduction to this edition which discusses gender and sexuality in the novel and how they relate to its enduring popularity. At one point the essayist wonders why the initial audience included such a high proportion of women. This seems obvious to me; the story consists of two romances! There's been a female audience for novels of romance ever since they were invented.

So I was not really expecting romance, more a written version of the film High Plains Drifter or some such. Well, there's lots of mysterious strangers, injustice, desire for revenge, riding of horses and landscape worship and some gunplay, too, but it's inescapably a character-driven romantic tale. Fun, too, for the most part. The way things play out, the story is also the Fall of Adam and Eve, in reverse, which is a trifle weird.

It's surprisingly well written, apart from the occassions when the …

avatar for chrisbrooks

rated it

5 stars

Subjects

  • Mormons
  • Mormon women
  • Withersteen, Jane (Fictitious character
  • Lassiter (Fictitious character)
  • Polygamy
  • Women ranchers
  • Fiction

Places

  • Utah
  • West (U.S.)