After reading Miss Pennington's science fiction book 'Firmament: Radialloy', I wasn't sure if she could top that with a western. The only westerns I've ever read have been the 'Journeys of the Stranger' series, written by a Christian, that are not really that well written. My brother also wrote some cowboy stories when he was twelve or thirteen. Of course, I've watched quite a few old cowboy movies and enjoyed many of them. So I guess you'd say I have a fairly good grasp of the genre but I'm not crazy about it.
So, with all that said, I'd say that the mark of a good author is that they can take you into any genre, even one that you don't normally read or care about, and hook you. Which is what happened with 'Never'.
The story alternates between the POVs of two brothers: Ross Hamilton and his younger brother Travis. They live a good life in Spencervale, with Ross running the ranch that his father left him and Travis studying to be a school teacher. Then Grange Miller shows up in town, broken, dispirited, and extremely angry. Travis, through no fault of his own, gets on Miller's bad side, as do Travis's teacher Master Hayle and the town doctor. It is established early on that Travis has a problem with sleepwalking. So when he wakes up to find the sherrif accusing him of murdering Grange Miller, and with a witness to prove it, it looks like it's a closed case. But Ross isn't so sure, and things just don't add up.
With Travis sentenced to ten years in the brutal Dead Mines, Ross knows he has to prove that his brother is innocent. He is certain that at least one of the people staying in the hotel at the time of the murder had something to do with it, and so he and Master Hayle figure out a way to quarantine the hotel on account of a 'case' of the measles. However, Ross realizes that the more he investigates, the less clear everything is becoming and the less trustworthy everyone he thought he knew.
Meanwhile, Travis, not used to a lot of physical work, finds himself being worn down day by day, with little food or drink, fellow convicts that are more animal than human, and increasing pressure from the evil Mr. Renshaw to do 'work' that Travis is quite sure is not morally right.
So, my thoughts. The book started out just a tad slow, but it picked up very quickly. I really liked Travis and Ross, and the cast of supporting characters was great. Miss Pennington knows how to pile on the tension and how to tangle everything up so that we become as puzzled as the main characters, then she unravels it slowly and makes us say, "Wow!"
As in 'Radialloy', the main characters are Christians, but again it isn't preachy or hit-you-on-the-head stuff. It's very refreshing to see the characters acting out their faith, and growing in it too, without having a corny and unrealistic 'conversion scene' as so many Christian authors feel they have to put in for their book to be 'Christian'.
The author is also very good at evoking emotions. There was one place where I seriously wanted to cry (not going to spoil it for ya'll, but it had to do with a young woman named Kate), and I could feel Travis's despair and weariness and everything.
There are a few cons, but not many. I thought that the book emphasized Travis's sensitiveness a bit too much. He wasn't a sissy by any stretch of the imagination, and I didn't like that word being used so often because of the connotations. There were also a number of typos, where a letter of a word would be missing, which hopefully will be fixed in later editions. Other than that, though, I say thumbs up to J. Grace Pennington for a wonderful and engaging tale. I hope she'll write more cowboy stories, because I will definitely read them.