Michael McGarrity is the author of the Kevin Kearny series (e.g., Tularosa, Mexican Hat, Serpent's Gate, etc.). These have all been enjoyable, well written mysteries with an interesting protagonist, set largely in New Mexico and the Southwest.
In Hard Country, McGarrity has laid out, in a sweeping, epic-style novel, the origins of the Kearny family, beginning back in the 1870's. He clearly set out to stretch as a writer by penning a vast, multi-generational tale spanning the old West, two wars, and the beginning of the industrial revolution. Sometimes, one's strength can be one's greatest weakness as well. In McGarrity's desire to cover so much ground, ala McMurtry's Lonesome Dove, he loses focus at times. Is this a Western? Is this a War story? At times, I wasn't sure. The meat of this novel centers on repeatedly demonstrating the veracity of the title. Indeed, the "hard country" theme becomes downright depressing at times, beginning early with the death, in childbirth, of John Kearny's young wife. He is forced to give his baby son, Patrick, over to his sister-in-law, planning on retrieving him in the future. Of course, that plan goes awry, and the first third of the book involves John's search to retrieve his son. Along the way, he meets up with Cal Doran, a very likeable and strongly written character, and the two establish a close bond that reminds one of Gus and Call in Lonesome Dove. Patrick, John's son, dominates the 2nd third of the book, and is at once a pitiable, sympathetic, and despicable, unlikable character. Granted, his life has been hard (yes, more "hard country" theme), but the emotional scars he bears from his early life experiences seem insurmountable. That Cal more or less adopts Patrick and tries, with the patience of Job, to rehab him into a good man (he already had trained him to be a good "hand" on the ranch) fills much of the book.
McGarrity is at his best when writing dialogue. He clearly researched and used well, the lingo of the late 1800's cowboy, and it is during the exchanges between the numerous, richly drawn characters, that the story captivates. Unfortunately, the author elected all too often to write in the 3rd person, and the pages of description begin to drag, given the length (600+ pages) of the book.
The last third of the book centers on Emma, a strong, albeit emotionally damaged, young woman who eventually marries Patrick and bears him 2 sons after numerous miscarriages (yep, more "hard country" depressing material). Here we have the union of two emotionally scarred individuals amidst a group of "too good to be true" friends such as Cal, Ignacio, and others, and at times, the story felt forced.
The other criticism involves the author insisting on having two of the Kearny clan going off to war-- one in Cuba with the Rough Riders (and Teddy Roosevelt, no less), and the other enlisting and fighting in WWI (you guessed it-- more "hard country" suffering served up). I understand why the author was including the idea of his characters going to war, but felt it really derailed the vibe of the novel which functions best as a Western.
This is a well written book in general, but falls just short of the standard bearers of epic novels of the old West (think "The Way West" & The Big Sky" by A.B. Guthrie, or "Lonesome Dove" by McMurtry). For fans of the Kearny series and McGarrity, it is a definitely worth the time; for anyone who enjoys historical fiction and stories of the West, it's a good book to take a look at. Enjoy.