"Over on the Dry Side" by Louis L'Amour was an okay, not great, novel. Doby Kernohan and his father find an abandoned cabin and decide to move in. Problem is, there was a dead body in the front yard. Brother of the dead man, Owen Chantry, shows up and has no problem with the Kernohans occupying his deceased brother's cabin home. Evil villain Mac Mowatt and his gang are convinced there is hidden treasure on the Chantry/Kernohan property and they are determined to find it, at least as much as Doby Kernohan and Owen Chantry are determined to keep them from finding it, if it's even there. Beautiful Marny Fox is there as the damsel in distress window-dressing addition. Problem for Doby is that he is 16 while she is in her early 20s, too old for him, but not for Chantry. This all plays out somewhat clumsily.
There were several problems with this novel. First, L'Amour again uses the awkward first person-mixed-with-third person narration. I'm not a fan of first-person narration to begin with, and it's worse when an author such as L'Amour combines it in the same novel with traditional third person narration. I got the impression that when writing the novel L'Amour initially wanted the story to be about Doby Kernohan, but then he got more interested in Owen Chantry, and allowed the Chantry character to eclipse and run past Doby and his father. Moreover, there were some scenes where credulity is stretched to the breaking point, such as when Chantry asks Mowatt if it would be okay for him to ask Marny to marry him, because, villain or not, Mowatt is Marny's closest male relative. Protocol courtesy, you know.
The plot line is vintage L'Amour, but I've read a lot better from him than this somewhat "take care of business" story line.
Let me add that L'Amour's use of the word "taken" in place of "took" is getting tiresome, as in, e.g. "I taken my rifle", "We taken our horses" etc. I have never seen this misuse of "taken" in any pioneer/frontier/19th century diary, letter, newspaper article or whatever. I've only seen it in L'Amour's novels.