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Ridgwell Cullum was a British adventurer who left England at age seventeen to go gold-prospecting in the Transvaal. He then removed to the Cape of Good Hope, where he joined up with a league of freebooters fighting against the Boers. Unable to keep still, he crossed the seas and settled in the Yukon region of Canada. During his stay in that area, he narrowly escaped starving to death. He next crossed the Canadian border, and became a successful cattle-rancher in Montana. It is said that during this period he took part in Sioux uprisings on the Pine Ridge and Rosebud reservations. In 1903, Cullum published his first novel, The Devil's Keg. After its immediate success, Cullum decided to become a full-time writer. Dozens of novels followed throughout a career of nearly forty years. His principal early works include, Hound from the North (1904), The Night Riders (1906), and The Compact (1909). In 1931, these, along with The Purchase Price (1917), were published in an omnibus edition of his works. Despite Zane Grey's success in England, Cullum continued to hold his own in sales and popularity. His characters are larger-than-life, his descriptions vivid, and his plot mechanisms fool-proof.
Ralph and Nicol Westley are brothers, born and raised in the isolation of the Canadian Rockies. Strong yet simple and superstitious, they 'had been born to the life of the trapper and knew no other ... they were creatures of Nature who understood and listened when she spoke.'
A local trader named Victor Gagnon learns that they have discovered some gold and plays on their ignorance by concocting the story of the White Squaw, a beautiful, blue-eyed daughter of the Moosefoot tribe. Then suddenly, she appears.
This is a hard and stormy tale of trickery, murder and madness, as rugged as the terrain in which it's set. The prose is similarly toughened, only a little overcooked at times. There's nobody to like, and the elements are unforgiving.
That said, like the other novel I have read by Cullum, The Way of the Strong - which started out much as this story before opening out into something more ambitious - there is no denying that he could write, even if there was something of a meanness about him.