Originalist westerns author Zane Grey wrote a novel about his famous pioneer ancestor Betty Zane in a novel called "Betty Zane" in 1903 that was republished in 1974 as this "The Last Ranger." This is more of a pre-western frontier historical fiction tale than a classic western as it takes place in late-1770's western Pennsylvania. Betty Zane, Jonathan Zane, the Indian-captured Isaac Zane, the Indian fighter Lewis Wetzel, the traitor (spoiler removed), Betty's love interest Alfred Clarke, the chaos-spreading Indian-rousing white devil Girty, some Shawnees, Hurons, Delawares, and Wyandots, and other real historical figures make appearances.
Goodreads has combined both this "The Last Ranger" (1974 reprinting of the 1903 novel) and a post-nuclear apocalypse Cold War violence adventure also called "The Last Ranger," (1981) so the reviews are fun to scroll through and see the confusion. Honestly, I kind of want to find the nuke one.
This novel shares equal parts romance tale, pre- western genre environment and character beats, textbookish informational notes, travels through Indian, British, and pioneer settings, personal growth narratives and survival exploits, genealogical stories that Grey's family probably appreciated (this was written before he was a nationally-recognized tried-and-true author so it may have been intended just for his family reading before he was able to have it published), Austen-inspired societal obligations and unspoken feelings, and in a Cooper-inspired woodland frontier setting before the climactic 1782 Siege of Fort Henry when Betty Zane famously saved the fort.
Verdict: The earliest of Gray novels, "Betty Zane" aka "Last Ranger" has a lot of ideas mashed into one place and is a challenge, reading a bit dry at times and not as immersively alive as Grey's later western classics.
Jeff's Rating: 2 / 5 (Okay)
movie rating if made into a movie: PG