The Virginian: A Horseman of the Plains
Owen Wister
   Public Domain Books
   Fiction, Western
   Themes: Classics, Equines, Frontier Tales, Thieves
   ****
   
Description
The Virginian left home at fourteen to escape the stodgy, hemmed-in future embraced by his brothers. His roving ways and skill in the saddle at last brought him to Sunk Creek in Wyoming as a ranch hand. Here, as related by an Easterner acquaintance, the young man unexpectedly loses his heart to a Vermont-born schoolmarm... a courtship complicated by her New England breeding, cattle rustlers, and a personal rivalry that might destroy everything.
Review
First published in 1902, this is considered the first "true" Western. Even as it was being written, the world it described - a world of cowboys and 
   tenderfoots and settlers carving new lives from seemingly endless tracts of unspoiled wilderness - was already fading into memory. Within the book 
   itself, the characters often acknowledge the coming end to a way of life that, in some ways, seemed to still be in the act of being created. Wister 
   captures an era in his words, a country that somehow is both civilized and rough, where a man could literally ride into nothing and create an empire - 
   or start with everything and lose it all. There's a certain larger than life quality to life on the frontier, as he describes it; I don't know if 
   nostalgia was already coloring the era, but it makes for interesting reading. He also creates the epitome of the gentleman cowboy in the never-named 
   Virginian, a soft-spoken Southerner with a keen mind, a quick wit, and a firm code of ethics that's tested nearly to the breaking point more than once. 
   He almost seems too good to be true, especially as viewed by the sometimes-narrator, an endlessly naïve Easterner tenderfoot who is also never 
   named (and who doesn't witnesses long stretches of the story.) To be honest, I'm not sure what purpose the narrator truly served, except to give readers 
   a window into the alien world of the Western frontier of the 1880's... and to give the Virginian someone to talk to on occassion. The love interest, 
   Molly, starts out so mired in her East Coast ideals of propriety and proper breeding that it was hard to rationalize her decision to move to the lawless 
   West, let alone the Virginian's instant and unshakable attraction to her. Her moment of truth shocks her as much as it does him, not to mention the reader. 
   The storyline often meanders like a lowland creek, pausing at the occasional eddy or pool before slowly trickling onward, with the occasional burst of 
   whitewater now and again. It slowly builds to a tense climax... then meanders about some more before finally reaching an ending that's almost too 
   neat.
   In the end, while the wandering plot cost it a star in the ratings, Wister's distinctive characters and deft portrayal of a vanished world kept it at four 
   stars.
