
Set against the rolling hills and sun‑kissed valleys of early‑twentieth‑century California, the story opens at the venerable Rancho Palomar, a place where the pride of old‑world ancestry meets the rugged spirit of the new frontier. Don Miguel Farrel, the dignified patriarch, presides over a landscape of bougainvillea‑laden gardens, mission chapels, and a bustling hacienda that still clings to the traditions of its Spanish‑Mexican forebears. Through vivid scenes of candle‑lit prayers at the Indian reservation and bustling kitchens serving galina con arroz, the narrative paints a portrait of a land caught between memory and inevitable change.
As the season turns, newcomers—Japanese farmers, itinerant cooks, and opportunistic prospectors—begin to stir the quiet rhythm of life on the ranch. Their arrival forces the characters to confront the erosion of the old order, the loss of native lands, and the fragile hope of preserving a disappearing way of life. The novel balances tender nostalgia with the stirring tension of a California on the brink of transformation.
Language
en
Duration
~9 hours (548K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
2005-09-08
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1880–1957
A San Francisco-born storyteller and screenwriter, he became known for brisk, popular tales of business, adventure, and the American West. His bestselling novels and magazine serials, including the Cappy Ricks stories, reached a huge audience in the early 20th century.
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