
In the dust‑blown plains of Dry Creek, a modest ranch once owned by a lone Mormon deserter becomes the seed of Gaston, a town that erupts overnight when the Western Pacific railroad stakes its claim. The narrative captures the feverish optimism of a frontier boom: electric lights flicker on a night shift, locomotives roar across newly laid tracks, and hopeful settlers pour in, turning sand‑scarred earth into bustling streets and thriving farms.
The story follows a cast of ambitious figures—Hawk and Guilford, the aggressive land buyers; Jethro Simsby, the tragic cattle king whose fortunes crumble; and David Kent, a New England‑trained lawyer turned reckless real‑estate speculator. As the town races toward prosperity, the first cracks of an inevitable crash appear, and Kent’s insider position with the railway hints at the looming disaster. Listeners are drawn into a vivid tableau of ambition, risk, and the fragile promise of the American West.
Language
en
Duration
~8 hours (487K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by Jonathan Ingram, Andrea Ball and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team.
Release date
2004-03-01
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1856–1930
Best known for brisk, entertaining novels of the American West and the railroad age, this early 20th-century storyteller turned business, politics, and frontier change into lively popular fiction.
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