"Virginia Price, a privileged New York debutante, pregnant from a rape, is forced to travel west to bear her child away from New York society. Henry Mohr, exhausted from combat in the trenches of World War I and haunted by his abusive father, returns home to his family's Wyoming ranch. They are the most unlikely of lovers. Virginia, at seventeen, is at home in New York's after-hours speakeasies; Henry, only with a concrete task before him: breaking a horse to saddle, sinking a fence post.
Sharing nothing but loneliness and a certain watchfulness of soul, they begin an affair that soon grows into something beyond their control." "At first it seems purely physical, or as if their bodies were being drawn together to fill in one another's absences. But when a man from New York arrives to claim Virginia's hand in marriage and Henry's father threatens to repeat his past abuses, Virginia and Henry must confront their love for each other."--BOOK JACKET.
Author of an acclaimed novel, *Last Year’s River*, a highly influential consideration of the ethics of hunting, *A Quiet Place of Violence*, and co-editor, with William Kittredge, of *The Best of Montana’s Short Fiction*, Allen Morris Jones is also the author of more than one hundred published short stories, articles, essays, and poems. He began his twenty-year career in publishing as Editor of the magazine Big Sky Journal before going on to work as an acquisitions editor for the Lyons Press and as Publisher of his own small book house, Bangtail Press. He has recently returned to work as Editor of Big Sky Journal. - From author's website