Review: Richard Satterlie's Phoenix
Posted: Saturday, May 27, 2006
by ngoldman
Norm Goldman
Author: Richard Satterlie, Ph.D
ISBN: 1593745702

The following review of the ARC copy was contributed by: NORM GOLDMAN: Editor of Bookpleasures. CLICK TO VIEW Norm Goldman's Reviews
To read Norm's Interview with Richard Satterlie CLICK HERE
The world of Richard Satterlie’s
Lars Olafson’s parting and wounding words to his son Sievert were “if you go, you’re not part of this family." However, this does not deter Sievert from leaving his family, as well as his girlfriend Anna and hopping on a stagecoach that ultimately delivers him to the wilds of the
During his long and tiresome ride to
One day, while Swilling and Sievert are on a business trip, Swilling offers Sievert the opportunity to invest in the Montgomery Mine. He tells Sievert that for one hundred dollars he can own a one third share, the other two shares would be owned by Swilling and his wife
Sievert’s opportunity to earn a more gainful employment eventually occurs when Swilling informs him that the Tip Top Mine is in need of a good bookkeeper. Apparently, the previous bookkeeper was alleged to have misrepresented the accounting books and pocketing some of the profits. As this was the Wild West, the principle of due process of law was ignored and the poor fellow was strung up on a tree without having the benefit of a fair trial. This was to serve as a lesson and reminder to anyone contemplating cheating the individuals who owned the mine. After pondering over the offer made to him by the principals of the Tip Top Mine, Sievert decides to take up the offer and move to
It is while working at the mine that Sievert’s becomes a spectator into the world of some unscrupulous, unethical and illegal activities and where he is reminded of what Swilling had taught him concerning doing business in this part of the world-either you do it to them or they’ll do it to you. However, even after having been personally bit as a result of some of these activities, he faces an ethical and moral dilemma, as this is certainly not the way he had been brought up by his parents. Nonetheless, he realizes that Swilling was right about the best way to survive the rough and tumble
This riveting fast-moving tale is skillfully crafted as Satterlie throughout the novel cautiously but almost unnoticeably sets out the signposts of his story. In each unpredicted turn of events the reader realizes that it is in reality the outcome of something set in motion earlier. His dialogue sounds right and the depiction of many of the characters that lived in this neck of the woods in the late 1800s is right on the mark. Although, this is Satterlie’s first attempt at fiction, he shows considerable maturity in telling a story in a fresh and engaging way. I also found the intertwining into the story of the character of Jack Swilling, who probably put the city of
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