Not for moments did he remember his physical state, and then he guessed it was just the old revolt of outraged nature, driven to the limit this time. As he realized gradual recovery, he dismissed a vague, dreamy thought of how sweet it would be to die in her arms.
I don't know how I overlooked this novel for so long. Having read almost everything Zane Grey ever wrote, I thought I was long past the point of being surprised by his novels, but this one is very different from his earlier westerns and, in my opinion, is an example of some of his best writing.
Published in 1928, the story is set roughly 10 years earlier and focuses on a battle-scarred veteran, Clifton Forrest, who is returning home to New Mexico to die. Forrest is not your typical Zane Grey protagonist. There are suggestions that he served heroically in the war, but all we see of him for much of the book is a convalescing soldier suffering from physical wounds as well as what we now recognize as PTSD.
The bad guys are the familiarly shallow, completely evil characters from earlier Grey books, but family dynamics add a layer of complexity that makes this one a more satisfying read.
Even though the setting isn't the "Old West," the narrator lavishes the usual attention on the landscape. Set mostly in the area near Las Vegas, New Mexico, the book also features excursions to Colorado Springs (including the Garden of the Gods) and Denver, as well as a trek to the southwest that skirts the White Sands area of New Mexico.
The racial stereotypes and slurs will be offensive to modern readers; the romance is as sappy as ever; and the occasional scenes of violence are shocking in their brutality. Yet there are other moments where violence is anticipated (and expected by Grey readers) that are stifled, replaced by episodes of unusual personal introspection. The two lead characters seem to represent a particular post-War vitality. Morally strong, both seem possessed by a kind of fatalism that places certain moral values above their own fortunes, including their own lives.