A marvelous book, that I enjoyed very much. My first Zane Grey. My dad read mostly westerns, and he had the Zane Grey library published by Walter J. Black in the mid 50's, which I inherited and just recently started dipping into.
Zane Grey is an early western writer, and a popular one, so many tropes that originated with him have become cliche, which becomes a disservice to his work if one doesn't read it with a sense of context as well. His characters are also very much a product of his time, the 20's and 30's versus the late 1800's in which the stories are taking place for the most part. His writing is simple and direct, very rarely poetic, in contrast to writes like Max Brand. But that Zane Grey cares about his subject matter is evident, and I found that this book in particular drew me in and became for me one of the most enjoyable books I have read over the last year or so. The last book I read of any genre that I enjoyed as much as this was Little Big Man, which has some surface similarity with this book, though a much different tone.
Fighting Caravans follows the life of Clint "Buff" Belmet from boy to man, the majority of his life taking place with the social milieu of the freight caravans which moved goods and people across the dangerous plains of the western frontier. Clint loses his mother to a native attack on his first caravan, and his growth and outlook is shaped by that traumatic event, and though it hardens him and forms his early outlook, Clint grows through the course of the novel and ends with a much more balanced outlook. The novel is picaresque and episodic, with the main backbone of plot consisting of a romance with a girl that starts when they are children, and progresses more or less how one would expect in a story like this, but I found the book to be more of a reflection on the growth of Clint, and the changes in the nation as a whole seen through Clint's eyes. In that respect it is very much like Little Big Man, though that book has a much more comedic outlook than this one. We meet many historical characters important on the western frontier, and see them through Clint's eyes. Men like Kit Carson, Custer, etc.
Overall, I found this book very enjoyable. Zane Grey definitely deserves his place in the history of the western novel, and I will be reading more of his work.