When Ike Parsons, a fair-minded Montana sheriff, must humanely destroy the starving livestock of failing rancher Chas Stubblefield, the rancher plots a grim revenge centering around Ike's wife Pattiann, who shares past secrets with Stubblefield.
"Fresh and provocative...Davis's literary ethos rivals Larry Watson, Kent Haruf and Ivan Doig." --Ron Franscell, San Francisco Chronicle
"Brilliant, beautifully written...Davis's skill brings wintry Montana alive." --Kirkus Reviews (starred)
"Wonderful...her story races toward a gripping, ice-bound tragedy." --Ron Charles, Christian Science Monitor
"Impressive...Davis writes so well." --Bob Minzesheimer, USA Today
"A fine first novel....with lyrical precision, Davis describes a way of life in which actions are more eloquent than words." --The New Yorker
"Davis...vividly teaches her readers something new... fresh and unexpected every time." --Susan Salter Reynolds, Los Angeles Times
"Penetrating, and heart-wrenching detail... Davis has pictured the region and its peoples with such credible vividness that her images speak for themselves." --San Diego Tribune
"[A] wonderfully strange story...an unflinching portrait of a way of life indebted to nature." --Louise Jarvis, The New York Times Book Review
"This is a novel of social class and dreadful climate, Americans in desperate circumstances trying--and sometimes failing--to live peaceful lives." --Carolyn See, Washington Post