Zane Grey evokes the atmosphere, hardships and possibilities of the Old West like nobody else. Leaving Missouri with no knowledge of cattle ranching, Jim Traft of Missouri is put in charge of building one hundred miles of fence on his uncle's western ranch to prevent cattle from drifting. The job puts him in conflict with the local community and he must find a balance. There's also the lovely Molly Dunn to distract him; but how can he hope to woo the sister of his chief enemy? The Drift Fence shows how this tender young man struggles to overcome the odds he faces and ultimately wins over the heart of the beautiful young lass.
Pearl Zane Grey was an American author best known for his popular adventure novels and stories that presented an idealized image of the rugged Old West. As of June 2007, the Internet Movie Database credits Grey with 110 films, one TV episode, and a series, Dick Powell's Zane Grey Theater based loosely on his novels and short stories.
Leaving Missouri with no knowledge of cattle ranching,Jim Taft of Missouri is put in charge of building one hundred miles of fence on his uncle's western ranch to prevent cattle from drifting. The job puts him in conflict with the local community and he must find a balance.
Zane Grey’s writing career was in full stride when this novel was first published in 1929 as a serial in the pages of The American Magazine. That year saw two other serials, in The Country Gentleman and Ladies Home Journal, plus short fiction in Collier’s and McCall’s.
Not much has changed since he found his basic western formula in his first novel, Heritage of the Desert (1910). A tenderfoot arrives in the Southwest, learns the ways of the West, wins the heart of a western girl, does battle with a nasty villain and his gang, and wins the approval of his superiors. . .
A historical fiction tale told by an expert. Drift Fence chronicles some of the first barbed-wire fencing put up on the open range in Arizona. The fencing made sense from the owner’s perspective by preventing cattle from drifting into the breaks, where they were soon to disappear by finders-keepers cowhands. In reality, it angered ranchers who had lived under the open range concept. It precipitated a few range wars here and there over the installation of such fences. The story relates an excellent perceptive of the cowhands and what they thought of the fences. There’s romance in the air as well with the young Molly Dunn and Jim Traft, the tenderfoot from Missouri put in charge of installing the fence by his grandfather.
Another of Zane Grey's great stories. I think we like his stories so much because they always have a romantic angle as well as the traditional bad guys vs. good guys theme. A ranch owner's grandson from Missouri is charged with the job of putting up a "drift fence" over a hundred miles long, even tho he really knows nothing about the territory or the people. He does, however, strike up a liking for a 16 year old girl who just happens to be the sister of a known gunslick.
My first Zane Grey book, very interesting to go through the vocabulary used in the narration and the dialogue. I felt like it added to the mystique. Molly and Jim are great leads, Arch and Hack are strong antagonists - just a strong book with a style I am not use to reading. It isn’t fast paced, it is rich in details though and I appreciated the thorough resolution. Resolving the main characters seems unusual in modern authors. I look forward to reading another by Grey.
A wonderful will written classic romantic thriller western with interesting will developed characters. The story line is fast moving with lots of fun, action, and violent racing to the conclusion. I would recommend this novel to western and Zane Grey fans. Enjoy reading 🔰2021 🐂🐑🐓
This is the best novel by Zane Grey I have read followed by its sequel the Hash Knife Outfit. A tenderfoot is put in charge of building a drift fence to keep the cattle on the ranch so the rustlers don’t steal more of the cattle then they already have. It’s a great western. This is the book I would recommend to read of all of the Zane Grey books.
Extremely dated as any Western. A story written in gently different times. A love story and one dealing with the settling of the West. At times tedious and other times romantic. Not my favorite Zane Grey story.
Quick easy read. A classic of the great western romances. It is simple. Unrealistic. Flat characters. Somewhat disrespectful to the role of women. But oh so entertaining!
This particular book I would call middle weight Zane Grey. It was fine in its own way, but pretty inferior to the last two I read, "Light of Western Stars" and "Last of the Duanes." It had a very appealing heroine, Molly Dunn, and an equally appealing bad guy gone good, her brother Slinger Dunn. The hero, Jim Traft, I found a cookie cutter not really tender tenderfoot character, typical of a number of hard boiled types that often crop up in Grey's novels. To his credit, Jim prefers duking it out with hist fists over the gun play that shocked Grey's editors back in the 1920s. I also enjoyed reading about the cowboys' tasks in building the controversial drift fence and the mayhem it engenders. Though "The Drift Fence" is one of Grey's Mogollon Rim novels, he doesn't constantly wax poetic about the scenery. This might make it more appealing to readers who are not fond of descriptive narratives such as you would find in "Riders of the Purple Sage."
This Story is a FABULOUS read! Full of action & romance as well! This Story could be called a history lesson, as well as a western way of life during this time of the late 1800's! This Book is worth your time to read & is sure worth the purchase price! Enjoy Yourself Reading This Great Story!