Charles Frazier is best known for the hit Cold Mountain, his latest book is also set in a rugged past with a bit of a plain name to it, The Trackers.
The plot centers on a muralist for the Works Progress Administration sent to Wyoming to add art to the post office in the small town of Dawes.
That artist, Valentine Welch, has a rich benefactor in John Long who has recently married and is pondering politics as a next move. That wife, Eve, is mysterious and fresh off being a singer that travels the country. Another mysterious Eastwoodian character is Faro, the head ranch hand.
This was a bit of a split book. The front half is about the various people and the town and the mural. Then Eve disappears and it becomes a Chandler / Hammett mystery. Neither really worked for me because the lead, Val, is plain and uncomplicated so the others have to raise the interest level. And they do so in a very rote way. The troubled singer, the world wise ranch hand and the land baron who seems upright but is hiding a certain rot underneath. The Trackers has a written for the screen feel to it.
I would have Ranch Water as the first pick even though I have only had 2nd generation not really a Ranch Water. Since this is a beer and a book post, I would select an often overlooked pair of styles. The brown ale and the amber ale. This book is kind of pedestrian and you need a beer with some heft and malt to it.