The Last Cowgirl
Dickie Sinfield was seven years old when her father uprooted the family from their comfortable suburban home and moved them to a small, run-down ranch in Clayton, Utah, where he could chase his dream of being a cowboy. Dickie always hated the cattle-ranching lifestyle, and as soon as she turned eighteen she fled for the comforts of the city.
Now a grown woman, a respected journalist in Salt Lake City, Dickie is coming home following the tragic, accidental death of her brother. Suddenly back in the farmhouse she was once so desperate to abandon—emotionally exposed by, yet reluctantly drawn to the vast, desolate landscape and the solitude it offers—she must confront her family's past . . . and the horrifying discovery at the pivotal moment of her childhood that ultimately forced her to run from the desert.
Spanning two generations and vast landscapes, a novel that fans of Pam Houston and Barbara Kingsolver will eagerly embrace, Jana Richman's The Last Cowgirl will strike a powerful chord with anyone who has ever searched for solace in the space around them.
Praise for The Last Cowgirl:
“Richman’s mastery of the emotional geography is illuminating and calls to mind the work of Pat Conroy.”
-Kirkus Reviews
“A warm story of good folks who make bad decisions and then have to live with them.”
–Publishers Weekly
“Readers will be irrevocably drawn into this top-notch fictional debut from an amazing new talent.”
-Booklist
"Through rich characterizations and a vivid sense of place, Richman evokes the complex world of Utah west of the Oquirrhs. Grab this early contender for one of the year’s finest works of local fiction.”
-Salt Lake City Weekly
“The Last Cowgirl is an engaging and good-humored read that shows how profoundly a person can be shaped by the landscape in which they grow up, whether they want to be or not.”
-New West Magazine
"Engrossing. The narrative touches on complexities and contradictions that touch so many lives: steadfast patriotism vs. threatening governmental action; urban Mormonism vs. its earthier rural equivalent; and people vs. a past that can leave them with heavy baggage. With lovely specificity, Richman manages to tell a true Utah story."
–2008 ARTYS award winner for best fiction book