One morning in the late summer of 1886, Ulysses Pope walks away from his family, leaving behind a note that reads only 'A chance for work, hard cash.' His disappearance forces his family — wife Gretta, teenaged Eli and 10-year-old Danny — out of their northwestern Minnesota home and Gretta into the clutches of their landlord, the cretinous Mead Fogarty. Ulysses's quiet desertion doesn't come as a surprise. A veteran of the Civil War, he'd always been distant and withdrawn. But after being baptized the year before, he had retreated even deeper into himself, fighting demons Gretta can hardly imagine.
A few weeks later Eli intercepts a letter to his father from a woman in Bismarck, SD, and steals away in the middle of the night to hop a westbound train. He's followed closely behind by young Danny, who suffers from crippling migraines. But it's too late to turn Danny away. Eli pulls him aboard and the boys begin their journey west in search of Ulysses.
Abandoned by husband and sons, certain Ulysses has left her for another woman, Gretta considers her options: stay in town and rely on the greasy charity of landlord Fogarty, return home to the Denmark she left years before as an distraught 18-year-old, or go in search of her husband. She visits Ulysses's remaining family in St. Paul, hoping they will have word. There she learns that her husband has withheld essential information from her, including his history in the U.S. military, even his name.
This is when the story really begins, as these three narrative journeys weave across the Great Plains and into the Native tribal lands and buffalo roams of eastern Montana. It becomes not only the story of the Pope family, but of the West itself, the subjugation of the Plains Indians, the decimation of natural resources, including the great herds of buffalo that once defined the Plains, and the movement of peoples and technology to "settle" the American West.
Enger writes beautifully, his thoughtful, expansive style suited to the landscape and history he brings to life. It is a story of shame and redemption and the paths we all take to resolve our pasts, or at least to learn to live with the choices we have made. If you enjoy historical westerns, this is not to be missed.