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Little Century

A Novel

Audiobook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

A charged and eloquent novel about a young woman caught in the midst of the range wars in the American West at the turn of the century

Orphaned after the death of her mother, eighteen-year-old Esther Chambers heads west in search of her only living relative. In the lawless frontier town of Century, Oregon, she's met by a sunburnt, laconic cattle wrangler: her distant cousin, Ferris Pickett. Within days, Esther is perjuring herself at the county clerk's office, swearing that she is twenty-one and ready for the rigors of homesteading. Pick leads her to a tiny cabin that shows daylight at the chinks, and Esther begins her new life on the small lake called Half-a-Mind. If she can hold out for five years, the land will join Pick's already impressive spread.

Land—there's a lot of it wide-open in Century but, somehow, not enough. Esther has arrived in the middle of a range war; it's cattle against sheep, and water's at a premium. Small incidents of violence swiftly escalate; before long, blood spills on the dry ground, and the railroad starts to think twice about laying tracks through Century. No railroad means no town, something Pick and his men will go to any lengths to prevent. Meanwhile, Esther finds her sympathies divided between her cousin and a sheepherder named Ben Cruff, a sworn enemy of the cattle ranchers. As her passion for Ben and her land grows, she begins to see how at odds these things are with her cousin's own interests. She can't be loyal to both; at some point she'll have to make a terrible choice.

Little Century maps our country's cutthroat legacy of dispossession and greed; it also celebrates the ecstatic visions of what America could become. Through Esther's story, which veers between triumph and heartbreak, we see the American West as it was being forged. In the tradition of classics like My Ántonia and There Will Be Blood, Little Century is a resonant and moving debut novel by a gifted writer.

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    • Publisher's Weekly

      April 2, 2012
      Keesey debuts with a confidently energetic tale of an 18-year-old orphan who leaves Chicago to eke out a new life for herself in Century, Ore., at the turn of the 20th century. Esther Chambers arrives knowing little about the West, but cousin Ferris “Pick” Pickett—a cattleman and embodiment of the independence and enterprise of the frontier—sets Esther up in a cabin on the shores of Lake Half-a-Mind with plans for her to homestead till the land becomes a part of Pick’s holdings. As Esther acclimates to a life of hard work—which Keesey evokes in economical and striking images—she comes to love the land and its inhabitants, learns to ride a horse, and falls for a sheepherder, the enemy of the cattleman. When factional conflicts erupt in violence, the harsh realities of cowboy justice and life in the West come to light, forcing Esther to choose her loyalties carefully. While Keesey offers a variety of characters with intriguing stories of their own, it is the richly depicted setting—from desert to dry goods store—that showcases her talent. Agent: Julie Barer, Barer Literary.

    • Publisher's Weekly

      September 24, 2012
      When 18-year-old orphan Esther Chambers heads west in 1896 to live with her last surviving relative, she is timid and twitchy—and narrator Tavia Gilbert skillfully portrays those qualities. Creating a voice that is self-conscious and wistful, Gilbert perfectly captures the slightly traumatized and wistful Esther. For the novel’s many male characters, Gilbert depicts the rough accents and slowed cadences of the American West without resorting to cowboy caricature. She also does a masterful job in her portrayal of Pick, Esther’s distant cousin, who has big dreams for the tiny Oregon outpost called Century. In the novel’s highly emotional conclusion, however, Gilbert’s characterization of Esther falls flat. The character has changed dramatically over the course of the story, but the narrator’s interpretation remains largely the same. The girlish vocalization Gilbert uses so successfully at the beginning of the novel fails to match Esther’s newfound courage and confidence. A Farrar, Straus and Giroux hardcover.

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  • OverDrive Listen audiobook

Languages

  • English

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