Rogue River Feud is one of Zane Grey's least known novels. This is, perhaps, because it isn't a Western-it's a Northwestern. The Rogue River in Southern Oregon is the main character. Zane Grey had a cabin on the Rogue and his attachment and fascination with this epic river makes it the primary focus of the book. For this reason, the book is a great read for anyone who has been on, around, along, over or in this wonderful wild stream. There are, of course, characters and a semblance of a plot. The first chapter, however, is worth the price of the book. It is the best writing about the Rogue that has been done before or since and poetically and descriptively traces the river from its birth below Crater Lake to its dispersal into the Pacific and then picks up a school of salmon and takes them all the way back up the river to spawn. Environmental organizations attempting to save Northwest salmon should be handing Rogue River Feud to anyone who will take a copy.
Kevin Bell, our human hero, returns to Grants Pass, Oregon at the conclusion of WWI a broken man, injured seemingly beyond repair. He has been damaged by an exploding cannon, an anecdote he repeats interminably throughout the book. His memory is shaky and he has become a drunk to stop the pain in his broken jawbone-a jaw that has been repaired by mediocre dentistry (Grey was trained as a dentist and was able to work both bad and good dentistry into the story). In addition, his reputation has been ruined by a former officer of his regiment who obscures his own crime by spreading the word that Kevin had ruined a family of five (that's 5) sisters (an incident which, in our day and age, might actually enhance a reputation. Presumably, this had taken place before the cannon blew up). Incensed at the slander, Kevin assaults his accuser, now politically well-connected and squiring Kevin's ex-fiancee, and has to flee down river with his old pal, the often inebriated fisherman/riverman Garry Lord. They run rapids in the dark in a skiff just finished by Kevin's dad. The descriptions of the river and river running are marvelous.
For the first half of the book they are involved in fishing for salmon near Gold Beach at the mouth of the river, where Kevin's former fiancee's crooked father has a lock on the cannery business. The descriptions of salmon fishing by net and by line are detailed and informative and the plot and character development point to an exciting denouement whereby Garry and Kevin will expose illegal fishing activities and insure a salmon and steelhead run for the upriver folks. But the author has romance on his mind for he causes Kevin to flee upstream after losing Garry in a storm and killing Garry's would-be adversary. Hopeless, distraught, and with revenge as a driving motive and an itch for a drink, he stumbles into a camp called Solitude where he and Garry had called briefly on their way down river. A beautiful dark-haired girl calls out to him. He doesn't remember her (because his memory had been damaged by that cannon explosion). Slowly, but surely the lovely, woodsy Beryl restores the composted memory of four days they spent together four years earlier when Kevin had camped and fished at Solitude. The remainder of the book is involved with their romance in this idyllic setting, the only conflict coming when it turns out that Beryl is a much better steelhead fisherperson than is Kevin. This romance goes on and on, kept interesting only by the the river that runs through it. Finally, Kevin, restored in body and spirit by the river and the young woman who had decided four years previously that he was the one, asks her to marry him. Off they go to Portland the very next day, by mule train and choo choo train, with her trapper father's blessing, to marry and get his teeth fixed (by a kindly dentist who had appreciated a fishing tip Kevin had given him). Thence on to Grant's Pass for a triumphant homecoming to learn that Garry Lord lives and that he had cracked the case on the illegal fisheries while Kevin had been fooling around in the woods. Kevin and his bride shop til they drop and then return to Solitude to live happily ever after (on the proceeds from the little gold mine that Beryl had been keeping secret).
Zane Grey had nineteenth century sensibilities but his writing about the Rogue River will always be up to date. The Rogue is a living, breathing entity in the novel. Living close to the Rogue and having had some experience with it I found the book more interesting than most readers might. My wife came close to drowning in the Rogue River, in a very easy section that Kevin and Garry could have run blindfolded. The Rogue takes a few souls every year as people make mistakes or get overconfident (the biggest mistake). Zane Grey got much of his material from the old timers who pioneered on the Rogue. A local interest book—A River to Run by Florence Arman and Glen Wooldridge gives insights into Zane Grey’s sources.
Glen Wooldridge was a local hero who was probably the first to run the wild and scenic part of the Rogue. He, in fact, was involved with blasting channels through the tougher sections so that certain areas did not require portage. He dynamited the by-pass around Rainie Falls which is an obvious obstacle to kayakers and fishermen, though I have sat on the edge of the falls and watched kayakers take a shot at it and survive. Much has changed since the fictional time in Rogue River Feud. Rafters and kayakers now need a permit to travel below Graves Bar to the ocean, for example. There are still many arguments to arbitrate. There are the jet boaters vs the drifters and floaters. There is controversy on how to deal with the proliferation of bears. There are always arguments about logging and salmon. The feud goes on.
We can thank Zane Grey for giving us a snapshot of a time on the Rogue River before Glen Wooldridge started running upstream in powerboats and before the river was clotted on a summer day with tour groups in rafts and kayaks.