Riders of the Purple Sage

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Title Riders of the Purple Sage
Leisure Historical Fiction (Mass Market Paperback)
Leisure Historical Fiction (Mass Market Paperback)
Author Zane Grey
Cover artist ?
Country United States
Language English
Genre(s) Western
Publisher Leisure Books
Released 1912
Media type Print (Hardcover & Paperback) & e-book), audio-CD
Pages 358 pp (Mass Market Paperback edition)
ISBN ISBN 0843956016 (Paperback edition)

Riders of the Purple Sage is Zane Grey's best-known novel. Originally published in 1912, it was one of the earliest works of Western fiction and played a significant role in popularizing that genre.

Contents

[edit] Plot Summary

Spoiler warning: Plot and/or ending details follow.

[edit] Plot in a Paragraph:

Riders of the Purple Sage tells the story of Jane Withersteen and her battle to overcome her persecution by members of her church. Jane Withersteen does this with the help of several of her Gentile friends, Bern Venters and Lassiter, and in the end Jane Withersteen, through the help of Balancing Rock and her Gentile friends, finds herself, a child who needs her, her true beliefs, and her true love. The events depicted in Riders of the Purple Sage occur between the mid-spring and the late summer of 1871.

[edit] Plot in Detail:

Early in Riders of the Purple Sage, we are introduced to Jane Withersteen and the main conflict; the right to befriend a Gentile. We are given the statement: “Jane Withersteen gazed down the wide purple slope with dreamy and troubled eyes. A rider had just left her and it was his message that held her thoughtful and almost sad, awaiting the churchmen who were coming to resent and attack her right to befriend a Gentile.”

We are introduced to Tull, an elder in the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (Mormon). It was the wish of Jane Withersteen’s father that Jane marry Tull, but as Tull was polygamist, Jane refused, causing a string of controversy and starting persecution against her.

Jane’s Gentile friend and rider Bern Venters is arrested by Tull and his men, including Jerry Card, who prepare to sentence him. Jane continuously defends him, declaring him her best rider. Her defense is worth very little to her churchmen, who refuse to value the opinion of a woman. It is here where we first hear mention of Lassiter. Venters uses Lassiter’s name to express the waves of terror that Lassiter has been known to cause. At the moment when Venters mentions Lassiter’s name, the actual Lassiter is seen approaching in the distance by Tull’s men.

Upon his arrival, Lassiter speaks briefly to Jane without introducing himself. Lassiter expresses his trust in the word of women, at which point Tull rebukes him telling him not to meddle in Mormon affairs. It is at this point that Tull’s men begin to take Venters away, when Venters screams Lassiter, at which point Tull understands that this man was the infamous Lassiter, and agrees to release Venters.

By the second chapter we have been introduced to many of the major characters in Riders of the Purple Sage. The statement, “’If by some means I can keep him here a few days, a week−−he will never kill another Mormon,’ she mused. ‘Lassiter!...I shudder when I think of that name, of him. But when I look at the man I forget who he is—I almost like him. I remember only that he saved Bern. He has suffered. I wonder what it was−−did he love a Mormon woman once? How splendidly he championed us poor misunderstood souls! Somehow he knows−−much.’” explains early on Jane’s intent to transform Lassiter to be less resentful of Mormons.

Lassiter shortly questions Jane about Milly Erne, to which her response she will take him to the grave of Milly Erne.

This statement: ‘Oh, your faith and your excuses! You can't see what I know−−and if you did see it you'd not admit it to save your life. That's the Mormon of you. These elders and bishops will do absolutely any deed to go on building up the power and wealth of their church, their empire. Think of what they've done to the Gentiles here, to me−−think of Milly Erne's fate!’, explains that Lassiter could see far into the future, and although Jane rebukes his statement, he is indeed correct.

Jane’s red herd is rustled shortly afterward, and Venters ventures to track it and return it to Jane. Bern finds the herd, but, in his travels, wages a gun battle with two of Oldring’s rustlers, managing to wound Oldring’s notorious Masked Rider while killing its companion. Upon further examination, he removes the mask and shirt of the wounded rider and learns that the Masked Rider is, in reality, a young woman named Bess whom he believes had been abused by Oldring. Venters experiences a large amount of guilt about shooting a girl and decides that it is his duty to save her.

It is through this guilt that Venters discovers Surprise Valley and Balancing Rock, where he takes Bess, the girl he has found. Bess gradually gains health and begins to fall in love with Venters who begins to fall in love with Bess. Each explain their individual stories ambiguously, but through Venters’ dedicated care for Bess, the pair forms a mutual love that leads to their resolve to marry. Bess had also discovered the truth concerning Oldring’s rustlers, who only rustled cattle to disguise their true lifestyle of surviving off gold in the streams and business deals with the Mormons.

Venters then determines that there is a need to attain supplies, thus warranting a trip back to Cottonwoods. On his trip to Cottonwoods, Venters sees Jane Withersteen’s prize horses being stolen. He kills the thieves and retrieves the horses for Jane, but unfortunately loses his horse, Wrangle.

Jane’s horses are returned to her, and are locked in the entry hall to Withersteen house. Venters officially breaks his friendship with Jane at this time. He goes into the village and proclaimed that he was breaking his friendship and leaving. After he leaves, Jane’s other herd gets stolen.

Jane at first pretends to love Lassiter – whom she knows had come to the Utah village to avenge the death of his sister Milly Erne – to prevent him from murdering the Mormon Elders that she knew were guilty. However, through their struggles against the plights calculated against Jane, these two characters also grow to love each other. The climax in their love occurs when Lassiter kills Bishop Dyer in the name of Jane and rescues the adopted Fay Larkin from Mormons while risking his own life.

Towards the end of the story, the four main characters – Venters, Bess, Lassiter, and Jane – realize that they can no longer safely stay in Utah. Lassiter convinces Jane to prepare to leave with him, and Lassiter is able to determine the name of the Mormon who ruined Milly. Jane, in a state of shock, packs everything in the house, and is ready to leave when Lassiter comes back.

Meanwhile, in Surprise Valley, Venters and Bess are preparing to leave, and at the same time as Jane and Lassiter start departing Surprise Valley, except on mules. Lassiter sets fire to Withersteen House and flees on horseback with Jane. They encounter Lassiter and Bess in travel. Before they part, Lassiter explains that Bess is not really Bess Oldring, but actually the lost daughter of Milly Erne, Elizabeth Erne.

Jane gives Venters her horses, Venters and Bess gallop for Venters’ Illinois home, and Lassiter and Jane find refuge in Venters’ valley paradise. At surprise valley, they are being attacked, causing Jane to shout to Lassiter "Roll the Stone", shutting forever the outlet to Deception pass.

[edit] Reflections

Unlike many Western novels which are often straightforward and stylized morality tales, Riders of the Purple Sage is a long novel with a complex plot that develops in many threads. The story is set in the cañon country of southern Utah in 1871. Jane Withersteen, a Mormon-born spinster, has inherited a valuable ranch and spring from her father, which is coveted by other Mormons in the community. When Jane refuses to marry one of the (polygamous) Mormon elders and instead befriends Venters, a young Gentile rider, the Mormons begin to persecute her openly. Meanwhile, Lassiter, a notorious gunman, arrives at the Withersteen ranch in search of the grave of his long-lost sister, and stays on as Jane's defender while Venters is on the trail of a gang of rustlers that includes a mysterious Masked Rider. Jane is intent on preventing Lassiter from doing further violence and is eventually driven off her ranch as the persecution escalates, but she and Lassiter fall in love, Lassiter solves the mystery of his sister's death and the fate of her child, the Masked Rider is unmasked, and Venters finds his own romance. Along the way, Jane also finds time to adopt Fay Larkin, a young Gentile orphan who accompanies her and Lassiter at the end of the story.

Riders of the Purple Sage was written in 1912 to partly present the influx of Mormon settlers into Utah (1847-1847) as a backdrop for the plot (1871). The Mormons had built the Kirkland Temple in Kirkland, Ohio in 1831, and Zane Grey would have been familiar with the Mormon sect given that he grew up in Zanesville, Ohio. Plural marriage was only officially prohibited by the Mormons with the issuing of the First and Second Manifesto in 1890 and 1904 respectively. In 1871, mainstream American society found plural marriage offensive. Even after the Morrill Anti-Bigamy Act was passed in 1862, Lincoln had no intent to enforce it and the practice had continued. Therefore, Zane Grey described the distaste of the institution through Lassiter in 1912 only after the practice had ended.

[edit] Characters

Spoiler warning: Plot and/or ending details follow.

[edit] Jane Withersteen

Jane Withersteen represents the force of established legal and religious law in Cottonwoods. From the beginning, Zane Grey describes the characteristics of Jane, “Trouble between the Mormons and the Gentiles of the community would make her unhappy… Jane prayed that the tranquility and sweetness of her life would not be permanently disrupted.” This identifies her as a lover of tranquility and peace, topics that seemed foreign to the other Mormons in 1871, a time of change when the Mormon communities struggled against the invasion of Gentile settlers and the forays of rustlers.

Likewise, Jane’s wealth has made her stubborn in her efforts to preserve the peace, which on several occasions lack logic and common sense. This is evident in her effort to disarm Lassiter despite her knowledge that he is persecuted by her townsmen, as well as her intent to relinquish her struggle and consent to marry Tull when the peace is on the verge of breaking. Lassiter had said, “The blindness I mean is blindness that keeps you from seein' the truth. I've known many good Mormons. But some are blacker than hell. You won't see that even when you know it.” Nonetheless, she is able to understand, in the end, the importance of questioning the authority of her spiritual guides, that misdeeds can be hidden in a disguise of goodness, and that violence is sometimes required in the absence of established law.

Throughout the story her perception of family changes, as she is able to acknowledge the wrongs committed by her father, and is able to speak more candidly about the guilt of her Elders to Lassiter. “Truly, Dyer ruined Milly Erne – dragged her from her home – to Utah – to Cottonwoods. But it was for my father! Blind I may be…fanatically faithful to a false religion I may have been but I know justice, and my father is beyond human justice. Surely he is meeting just punishment – somewhere.” After her tribulations, Jane also loses her vanity; in the beginning, she “cared most for the dream and the assurance and the allurement of her beauty… Hordes of Mormon and Gentile suitors had fanned the flame of natural vanity in her.” This transformation eventually allows her to abandon her townsmen and many Mormon customs, and in the end, she is left only with the two Gentiles – Lassiter and Fay Larkin – that constitute her new family.

[edit] Lassiter

“Jim” Lassiter symbolically enters the story as an answer to Jane’s prayer to spare Bern Venters of his fate. “She found herself murmuring, "Whence cometh my help!" It was a prayer, as if forth from those lonely purple reaches and walls of red and clefts of blue might ride a fearless man, neither creed-bound nor creed-mad, who would hold up a restraining hand in the faces of her ruthless people.” Lassiter’s black clothing represents his personality as an anti-hero; similar to the depictions of Shane and Zorro is later works. His act of saving Venters and his other characteristics (e.g. watering his horse before allowing himself to drink, honorable treatment of Jane, and frankness in honestly revealing his identity) quickly affirm his status as an enigmatic protagonist.

Zane Grey describes him as a gentle-voiced, sad-faced man who was a hater and killer of Mormons; together, these characteristics appear to be a paradox for the people around him. He is in his late thirties, and he has spent nearly half of his life riding into the west in search of his proselyte sister Milly Erne, who was persuaded to abandon her family and join the Mormon sect under the influence of Bishop Dyer and the elder Withersteen. Due to this tragedy, and his experience as a gunman in Oklahoma, Kansas, and Nebraska, Lassiter showed no compassion to the Mormons that he deemed to be guilty, but treated all others, like Jane Withersteen, with respect.

Nonetheless, he continues to doubt the Mormon way of life, and believes that its teachings are constructed from mal-intent. When Jane tells him, “The men of my creed have been driven in hate, up until they've become cruel, "but we women pray for the time when their hearts will soften,” he responds, “That time will never come.” The disdain for Mormonism is social, instead of religious, in nature. Lassiter says, “These Mormons ain't just right in their minds. Else could a Mormon marry one woman when he already has a wife, an' call it duty?” Indeed, Lassiter takes little heed of religion, but follows his own system of values that places his dedication for justice/vengeance above all other things. This system is briefly disrupted by his love for Jane, but when Fay Larkin is abducted by the Mormon Elders, he regains his dedication and kills Bishop Dyer. His dedication towards his work is also shown when he single-handedly routes and mills the stampeding White Herd.

[edit] Elizabeth Erne

Elizabeth “Bess” Erne is Milly Erne’s daughter and Lassiter’s niece, whom Oldring had sheltered for nearly two decades under the terms of a business deal with the Mormon Elders. She possesses more of a Western personality than her companion Bern Venters, having been born Texas and raised by cattle rustlers. She also became the most skillful equestrian in the region after Jerry Card’s death. While riding was enjoyable for her, she loved stability the most. When Venters asks her of her history, she says, “As long as I can remember I’ve been locked up there at times, and those times were the only happy ones I ever had. It’s a big cabin high up on a cliff, and I could look out. Then I had dogs and pets I had tamed, and books. There was a spring inside, and food stored, and the men brought me fresh meat. Once I was there one whole winter.”

Elizabeth brings optimism to the story and helps Zane Grey emphasize that men are easily changed by women; through Jane’s influence, Lassiter became more peaceful, and through Elizabeth’s company, Venters becomes more human. He realizes, “We can’t be any higher in the things for which life is lived at all…. relationship, friendship—love.” Throughout the novel, Elizabeth remains very static when compared to the other protagonists, and she only changes psychologically to accommodate the new love that she has for Venters. Even after recovering from her wounds, she appears very submissive to Venters while her personality remains childlike (e.g. fear of thunder even though she has lived in the West for all her life, regard for most of Venters’ schemes with enthusiasm, etc.). Even after she learns that Venters had killed Oldring, the man who had protected her, she quickly forgives him for the mere reason that Oldring was not her biological father.

Nonetheless, through love for Venters and freedom from the rustlers, Elizabeth does learn more about herself, “I’ve discovered myself — too. I’m young — I’m alive — I’m so full — oh! I’m a woman!” The change is physical as well, “She no longer resembled a boy. No eye could have failed to mark the rounded contours of a woman.” Though she had been raised by rustlers, her innocence and love for Venters allows her to join the list of the novel’s protagonists. At the end of the story, she again expresses her spirit as a Western woman who is saddened to enter civilization, “Oh! Bern! But look! The sun is setting on the sage—the last time for us till we dare come again to the Utah border… Oh, Bern, look, so you will never forget!”

[edit] Bern Venters

Bern Venters is Jane’s young Gentile rider who also embodies some traits of the Western hero and lives by his own code of honor. He and Lassiter share many parallels, and Venters is eager to learn from and follow the famous gunman, but Venters’ history is essentially in the East. He reveals his own respect of animals, which is often a protagonist trait, through favors for his dogs, Ring and Whitie. “Whitie watched him with somber eyes of love, and Ring, crouched on the little rise of ground above, kept tireless guard. When the sun rose, the white dog took the place of the other, and Ring went to sleep at his master’s feet.” He displays his chivalrous code when he shoots Oldring’s Masked Rider and nurses her back to health upon discovering that the rider was a female. Venters is described to stand tall and straight with a “blue flame of defiance” in his eyes.

To readers, Venters has been persecuted and ruined with his people by the Mormons. From the start, his anger with Tull is apparent, “Haven't you already ruined me? What do you call ruin? A year ago I was a rider. I had horses and cattle of my own. I had a good name in Cottonwoods. And now when I come into the village to see this woman you set your men on me. You hound me. You trail me as if I were a rustler. I've no more to lose – except my life.” Although he has been protected and sheltered by Jane and later Lassiter, his people, whom the Mormons classify as “nonbelievers”, are left impoverished and uneducated. The Mormon Elders eliminate all opportunities for the Gentiles to rise to prosperity, and they thwart Jane’s efforts to bring equality into the region.

Venters’ relationship with Bess transforms his personality. At the start of the novel, he claims that his “position is not a happy one”, saying, “I can’t feel right – I’ve lost all… I mean loss of good-will, good name – that which would have enabled me to stand up in this village without bitterness. Well, it's too late...” After loving Bess, he regains his determination and confidence. Of this Grey writes, “He climbed a great yellow rock raising its crest among the spruces, and there he sat down to face the valley and the west. ‘I love her!’ Aloud he spoke – unburdened his heart – confessed his secret. For an instant the golden valley swam before his eyes, and the walls waved, and all about him whirled with tumult within. ‘I love her! I understand now.’”

[edit] Bishop Dyer

Bishop Dyre is a corrupt Mormon minister who shows that fallibility of religion in a lawless society. Lassiter described the situation with anger, “You'd think churches an' churchmen would make it better. They make it worse. You give names to things – bishops, elders, ministers, Mormonism, duty, faith, glory. You dream – or you're driven mad. I'm a man, an' I know. I name fanatics, followers, blind women, oppressors, thieves, ranchers, rustlers, riders.” Instead, religion has become an excuse for exercising tyrannous power. In the story, Dyer operates the “invisible hand”, representing the law of the region, and assuming a position similar to Fletcher’s in Shane.

Dyer is physically described to possess a stern demeanor, “The Bishop was rather tall, of stout build, with iron-gray hair and beard, and eyes of light blue. They were merry now; but Jane had seen them when they were not, and then she feared him as she had feared her father.” As a bishop, he practices plural marriage; despite already having several wives, he informs Jane of his own intent to marry her if Tull did not. All of Cottonwoods’ Mormons were taught to love and revere the bishop investing alls of their “religious fidelity” and “acceptance of mysterious and holy Mormon truths” in him. As a result, he was valued as an “entity…next to God. He was God’s mouthpiece to the little Mormon community… God revealed himself in secret to this mortal.”

Bishop Dyer is also known to have fallible characteristics, sometimes “forgetting the minister in the fury of a common man.” With his authority, he could declare any person a heretic, and with the threat of excommunication from the Mormon sect (causing them to “face the damning of [their] soul to perdition”), force them to act in ways that would benefit the Mormon Council. To Jane he had said, “Remember, you're a born Mormon. There have been Mormons who turned heretic--damn their souls!--but no born Mormon ever left us yet.” Despite his transgressions, Dyer was a true believer of his faith, but according to Judkins, he had realized the weight of his wrongs too late to find salvation.

[edit] Elder Tull

Elder Tull is another member of the Mormon Council who utilizes the “invisible hand” against those such as Jane Withersteen who rebelled against the Mormon faith. As a character, Tull is portrayed cowardly. Ideologically, he is an “empire builder”, but physically, he relies on strength in numbers, and he is unable to face Lassiter or Venters alone. His cowardly demeanor is shown early in the story, when he, with the help of seven others, threaten to beat Venters. Yet, despite their superiority in numbers, they flee at the sight of Lassiter. Instead, Tull, who has been “in love with [Jane] for years”, uses his authority to attempt to convince her to marry him or risk damnation. His goal is to control her inherited wealth and prevent it from being used to aid the region’s impoverished Gentiles.

In Grey’s descriptions, he said of Tull, “[He] spoke with the arrogance of a Mormon whose power could not be brooked and with the passion of a man in whom jealousy had kindled a consuming fire.” Like Dyer, Tull is able to use his power for his selfish needs “[Tull] loomed up now in different guise, not as a jealous suitor, but embodying the mysterious despotism she had known from childhood – the power of her creed.” Dyer and Tull both remain unchanged in the story, being representations of unredeemable evil in Cottonwoods. However, Tull is presented even more lowly than Dyer. Where Dyer had calmness, Tull possessed reckless and violent rage.

In a literary perspective, Tull represents a pestilence that cannot be avoided. Jane Withersteen constantly reminds Lassiter and Venters to avoid Tull in order to prevent violence. However, stereotypical of a Western, readers understand that either Jane’s words will one day be ignored by Lassiter and Venters, or Jane one day will change her position regarding the topic to facilitate for the deaths of Dyer and Tull in a final showdown. By the end of the novel, both Elders had been killed by Lassiter – who ignored Jane’s pleas to kill Dyer, and who obeyed her command to “roll the stone” to kill Tull – who reaffirms his position as the Western hero who carries out his own forms of justice.

[edit] Oldring's Rustlers

Oldring, rustlers, et al rustled cattle and aided the Mormon Elders in their “invisible hand” campaigns. Therefore, they acted as antagonists by creating obstacles for the protagonists. In this respect, Oldring’s rustlers resemble hired mercenaries, whose existences are only tolerated due to their willingness to act for the Mormon Elders. In short, the Elders allow the rustlers to inhabit the valleys and steal cattle from nearby villages, a disguise for their living off the gold in the streams, in return for action against rebellious persons. This act, in itself, reveals corruption on the part of the Mormon Elders, as their actions cause them to victimize the only people wealthy enough to possess cattle: the Mormon followers of their own faith.

Those oblivious to the invisible hand speak of Oldring with anger, “For years my riders have trailed the tracks of stolen cattle. You know as well as I how dearly we've paid for our ranges in this wild country. Oldring drives our cattle down into the network of deceiving canyons, and somewhere far to the north or east he drives them up and out to Utah markets.” Similar to the other antagonists in the novel, the rustlers do not change their lifestyle or their ideology. The only disruption of their social order occurs when Oldring, Dyer, and Tull are killed. Despite this, readers do not learn the impact that these events had on the rustlers. It is assumed that the institution of cattle rustling will continue in the region until it becomes civilized with a legitimate government.

The final twist in plot regarding the rustlers is Oldring’s capability of honor and pity, “[Bess] was the rustler's nameless daughter. Oldring had loved her. He had so guarded her, so kept her from women and men and knowledge of life that her mind was as a child's. That was part of the secret--part of the mystery. That was the wonderful truth.” Yet, Oldring’s sudden death creates guilt in Venters for his rash murder and shrouds forever the human characteristics of Oldring.

[edit] Setting and Theme

Spoiler warning: Plot and/or ending details follow.

Setting and Theme have been combined in this analysis to prevent sounding repetitive. In Riders of the Purple Sage, so much of the setting affects the theme.

Riders of the Purple Sage is set in 1871 in Utah. It is set in a fictional area of Southwest Utah called Cottonwoods. Cottonwoods was founded by the father of Jane Withersteen, therefore Jane Withersteen inherited the worth of the village, “And then she sighed, remembering that her father had founded this remotest border settlement of southern Utah and that he had left it to her. She owned all the ground and many of the cottages. Withersteen House was hers, and the great ranch, with its thousands of cattle, and the swiftest horses of the sage. To her belonged Amber Spring, the water which gave verdure and beauty to the village and made living possible on that wild purple upland waste. She could not escape being involved by whatever befell Cottonwoods.”

In the above quote, several archetypal aspects of the west can be seen. The west is very often, like other epic stories, seen with a religion’s connotation. Based on this interpretation, the village had been founded by one person, representing God. It was founded because of the spring, representing the giving of life.

One of the main aspects of the west highlighted by Riders of the Purple Sage was the distance between towns and the mostly uncharted areas between them. The west was often characterized by little towns approximately 50 miles apart from each other. In these sections, locations like Deception Pass and Surprise Valley are found often.

Several thematic elements play a role in Riders of the Purple Sage including the significance of morality, honor, redemption, isolation and religious confrontation.

First, Zane Grey defends morality in characters like Jane. Jane is heavily persecuted for her views on what is moral and what is not moral. In the eyes of the reader, Jane is the righteous one, and thus, she is moral. Morality plays a role in most westerns in that the community questions the morality of the hero, as Jane questions the morality of Lassiter.

Second, Zane Grey shows honor in his characters including Jane. Despite her persecution, Jane’s prized possessions, the Blacks, bring her great joy. Venters and Lassiter honor Jane as she honors them. By this close relationship of honor, the trio is able to keep fighting.

Third, redemption is a theme shown in Riders of the Purple Sage. Venters apologizes to Jane for causing her this trouble. He tells Jane he will go into the town and renounce his friendship with her. Fourth, a major theme in this story is isolation. The main characters are isolated as they are forced to live forever in Surprise Valley. Each main character has spent quite a bit of time there before Balancing Rock fell. Because of the isolation of the location, they were protected for a great time.

Finally, the most pervasive theme in this story is religious confrontation. One must assume that in Riders of the Purple Sage, the word Gentile is synonymous non-Mormon. The Latter-day saints Church is portrayed very poorly in Riders of the Purple Sage. They are shown as very intolerant of the gentiles and those who befriend them. In the end, one might say that they didn’t really win as nothing has happened to Jane and her prized possessions, except that now, in Surprise Valley, she is free to do as she wishes.

In some of his later Westerns, Grey treated Mormon men in a more neutral way, but in Riders of the Purple Sage they are simply villains who use their religion as an excuse for greed and lust. The character of Lassiter is clearly recognizable as the archetype of the Western gunman hero; dressed in black, a loner, laconic and soft-spoken, combining a deep respect for women with a quick willingness to use his guns to dole out his own ideas of justice. Modern readers may find Jane's spiritual struggle somewhere between annoying and incomprehensible, but at the time the novel was originally published she was probably considered a radical feminist. In another sign of changing social values that may seem odd to modern readers, Grey completely sidesteps the question of whether Lassiter and Jane ever consummate their relationship.

Spoilers end here.

[edit] The Sequel

Rainbow Trail, a sequel to Riders of the Purple Sage that reveals the fate of Jane and Lassiter and their adopted daughter, was published in 1915. Both novels are notable for their protagonists' strong opposition to Mormon polygamy, but in Rainbow Trail this theme is treated more explicitly. The plots of both books revolve around the victimization of women in the Mormon culture: events in "Riders of the Purple Sage" are centered on the struggle of a Mormon woman who sacrifices her wealth and social status to avoid becoming a junior wife of the head of the local church, while "Rainbow Trail" contrasts the fanatical older Mormons with the rising generation of Mormon women who will not tolerate polygamy and Mormon men who will not seek it.

[edit] Movie Versions

Riders of the Purple Sage has been filmed several times, most notably as a 1931 movie starring George O'Brien as Lassiter and Marguerite Churchill as Jane, and a made-for-television movie in 1996 starring Ed Harris as Lassiter and Amy Madigan as Jane. There was also a 1925 version with Tom Mix and an earlier one filmed in 1918 starring William Farnum.

[edit] 1931 Cast
  • George O'Brien as Lassiter
  • Marguerite Churchill as Jane
  • Noah Beery as Judge Dyer
  • Yvonne Pelletier as Bess
  • James Todd as Vern Venters
  • Stanley Fields as Oldring
  • Lester Dorr as Judkins
  • Shirley Nail as Faye Larkin
  • Frank McGlynn, Jr. as Adam Tull

[edit] External links

In other languages