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The Time It Never Rained Mass Market Paperback – April 1, 2008
"The Time It Never Rained was inspired by actual events, when the longest and most severe drought in living memory pressed ranchers and farmers to the outer limits of courage and endurance."―Elmer Kelton
Rio Seco was too small to afford a professional manager for its one-room Chamber of Commerce.
And Rio Seco, meaning "dry river" in Spanish, symbolizes the biggest enemy of the ranchers and farmers in 1950s Texas, an enemy they can't control: drought. To cranky Charlie Flagg, an honest, decent rancher, the drought of the early 1950s is a battle that he must fight on his own grounds. Refusing the questionable "assistance" of federal aid programs and their bureaucratic regulations, Charlie and his family struggle to make the ranch survive until the time it rains again―if it ever rains again.
Charlie Flagg, among the strongest of Elmer Kelton's memorable creations, is no pasteboard hero. He is courageous and self-sufficient but as real as his harsh and unforgiving West Texas home country. His battle with an unfathomable foe is the stuff of epics and legends.
- Print length416 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherForge Books
- Publication dateApril 1, 2008
- Dimensions4.2 x 1.11 x 6.81 inches
- ISBN-100765360586
- ISBN-13978-0765360588
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Editorial Reviews
Review
“Elmer Kelton does not write Westerns. He writes fine novels set in the West. Here a reader meets flesh-and-blood people of an earlier time, in a story that will grab and hold you from the first to the last page.” ―Dee Brown, author of Bury My Heart at Wounded Knee on The Time It Never Rained
“The Time It Never Rained is not just one of the best novels ever written by a Texan. It is one of the treasures of American literature...” ―John Erickson, author of The Devil in Texas and the "Hank the Cowdog" series
“...one of the dozen or so best novels written by an American in this century.” ―Jon Tuska, editor of The American West in Fiction on The Time It Never Rained
About the Author
Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.
The Time It Never Rained
By Elmer KeltonForge Books
Copyright © 2008 Elmer KeltonAll right reserved.
ISBN: 9780765360588
The Time It Never Rained
Chapter One
RIO SECO WAS TOO SMALL TO AFFORD A PROFESSIONAL manager for its one-room Chamber of Commerce. The part-time volunteer, elected because no one else wanted the job, made his living selling an independent brand of gasoline two cents under the majors though he bought it from the same tank truck that serviced half the stations in town. A man of wit, some people thought, he had erected a big red-and-white sign on the highway at the city limits:WELCOME TO RIO SECO HOME OF 3,000 FRIENDLY PEOPLE--AND THREE OLD CRANKS!Farther inside the city limits, half-hidden between a Ford billboard and one for Pepsi-Cola, he had placed another sign:THIS IS GOD'S COUNTRY DON'T DRIVE THROUGH IT LIKE HELLThis cattle, sheep, and farming town was much the same as fifty others dotted along the interminable east-west highways which speed traffic across the great monotonous stretches of western Texas ranch country. To an impatient motorist hunting a cooler place to light before dark, these dusty little towns are all cut from the same tiresome pattern and, despite the signboard, a long way from heaven.Like most of them, Rio Seco had old roots. It had been born out of necessity, a trading place for sprawling cow outfits, for scattered sheep camps and industrious German dryland farmers who had come west with their wagons, their plows, and a compulsive will to build something. The town long ago had made its growth and found its natural level. Now it held steady, gaining no ground but losing none. Oil companies had come and punched their holes and found them dry. They had gone again, leaving dreams of quick riches to drift away on the arid wind like the cotton-white clouds that promised rain and failed to deliver.Life still depended on two fundamentals: crops planted by the hand of man and grass planted by the hand of God.Give us rain, they said at Rio Seco, and it makes no difference who is in the White House.If one thing set the town apart, it was probably the trees--pale-green mesquites and massive, gnarled live oaks, rustling cottonwoods and shady pecans, watered by a hundred windmills whose towers stood tall above a timid skyline. Modern municipal mains provided purer water for drinking and cooking, but most of the older generation clung to wells for yards and gardens and trees. For a man who has often turned his face to the hot breath of drouth, the sight of a windmill tower--its big steel fan clanking patiently and pumping up water clear and cool--somehow reaches deep and touches something in his soul.The town had three cultures--Anglo, German, andMexican. The first two had largely merged through the years--beef and beans and apple strudel. The third remained unassimilated, except perhaps in Rio Seco's unhurried pace of living. Most of the Anglos were addicted to Mexican food, and most of the Mexicans loved football, but these were superficial things.Many of the older rock homes had a no-nonsense squared-off solidity the Germans had brought from their original settlements in the Pedernales River section of the hill country. Across the railroad tracks, beyond roads dusty from passage of livestock trucks on their way to the shipping pens, lay the Mexican part of town--ageless adobes and small frame shacks, and a fair number of modern GI houses built since the war. The old and the new stood side by side in sharp contrast: a wrinkled, ancient Mexican working up adobe bricks out of straw and mud in a barefoot method known to the fathers of his grandfathers, while next door a three-man crew with electric saws cut raw lumber for a new frame house. Two small brown-faced boys sat on a forebearing Mexican burro, their black eyes alive with curiosity as they watched an older brother tuning the motor of a hotrod.For the ranchman, business centered around Emmett Rodale's old stone bank and Jim Sweet's feedstore-wool warehouse, a long, cool, cavernous building of concrete tile. There in round, well-packed jute bags wedged between steel poles and stacked nearly to the high ceiling lay stored the gray-white fleeces that for three generations had been a cornerstone of Rio Seco's economy.For the farmer, business focused on the same bank, the cotton gin and a small grain elevator with twin steel tubes that stood taller than anything else in town except the sun-catching silver water tower emblazoned with crudely painted red letters: SRS '51.In the second floor of the rock-fronted courthouse was a room which in recent years had emerged as another important economic fact of life: the county office of the federal PMA. Next to rain, perhaps, it had become the mostimportant fact. Here the man of the land came to declare his crop acreage, his past year's plantings. Here he was told how much land he would be allowed to seed in cotton, in grain sorghums, in whatever other crops might be under federal control. Here he came for price support and to receive checks to help him pay for terraces and water-spreading, for water wells and surface tanks, for battling back the prickly pear and thorny mesquite.Here he sold his freedom bit by bit, and was paid for it on the installment plan.March Nicholson, the county PMA officer, stood at the open window, looking down on the freshly mowed courthouse lawn, the buried sprinkler system showering green bermuda grass dotted by patches of dying winter rye. It always irritated him the way people parked haphazardly around the courthouse curb, ignoring the town ordinances, if indeed there were any. Across the street under a live-oak tree, half blocking the driveway to Nicholson's rented home, stood a pickup truck with a Hereford cow tied in the sideboarded bed and a saddled horse in an open-topped trailer hitched behind it. Horse droppings had tumbled over the tailgate and onto the ground; Nicholson would have to use his shovel tonight. He cursed under his breath. In the back of another pickup waited two Border Collie sheepdogs, resting but alert-eyed, watching a farmer pull up in a bobtail truck with two big tractor tires and several sacks of planting seed.Nicholson's baleful eye was pulled away from the horse droppings by a brush-scarred green pickup pulling into an open parking space."Well, I'll be damned. I wish you'd look who's come to the meeting."His district supervisor pushed to his feet from a chair in the courtroom's jury box where he had slouched to read a copy of the morning San Angelo paper. He watched a heavy, graying ranchman step out of the pickup and limp up the concrete sidewalk toward the front steps of the courthouse. He saw nothing which made that man lookdifferent from the couple of dozen stockmen and farmers already gossiping in the courtroom."I don't know him. Is he somebody special?""He's Charlie Flagg."The name meant nothing to the supervisor. "One of the rich ones?" he guessed. In this part of the country it was often hard to tell the rich man from the poor one by looking at him. The rich man was as likely to be wearing patched trousers and runover boots as the most destitute Mexican cowboy in town. One could not afford to put up a front and the other did not have to.Nicholson shook his head. "No, not rich. Charlie Flagg is one of those operators in the middle ground ... smaller than a lot of them. You've seen that sign on the edge of town, the one about the three old cranks? Charlie Flagg is Crank Number One."The supervisor watched the ranchman pause on the front steps to swap howdies with a deputy sheriff. The deputy, who probably did not swing a leg across a horse's back twice a year, was dressed in a neatly tailored Western shirt and tight-legged cowboy pants, shiny high-heeled boots and a nicely creased Stetson hat. The rancher, probably on horseback half his waking hours, wore a nondescript straw hat beaten badly out of shape and a pair of old black boots, his baggy khaki trousers stuffed carelessly into their tops. There was a lesson in this somewhere, the supervisor thought; someday he was going to reason it out."Gives you trouble, does he, March?""No trouble ... or anything else. Never sticks his hard head into my office. He's one of those old mosshorns who thinks he made it all by himself and he doesn't need anybody. I've tried to get him to go into some of our programs. You ought to hear him snort. Says the government didn't help him when he was getting started and he doesn't need it now.""Then I'd simply forget about him if I were you. Some people you can't change; you just have to outlive them.""Charlie Flagg is too contrary to die; he'll outlive us all."Nicholson's face twisted as he looked at the men who sat in little groups scattered around the big courtroom, talking weather and crops and prices. He had sent out five hundred postcards announcing the meeting; this looked like about all the crowd he was going to get."It's frustrating," he complained. "A man devotes his life to service, and this is the response they give him. Sometimes I wish I was selling cars in San Antonio."The supervisor said, "The rest'll come in when it's time to get their checks."Nicholson walked down the aisle and out into the hallway to see if there were any laggards. He saw Charlie Flagg come up the steps, laboring a little because of a slightly game leg. Part of a postcard stuck out of one shirt pocket. Nicholson shoved his hand forward. "Mister Flagg, when I sent you that card I had no hope you would actually come to the meeting."Flagg gripped Nicholson's hand hard enough to bring a stab of pain, but he looked puzzled. "Meetin'? What meetin'?""The meeting to explain the changes in the farm program."Flagg shrugged his heavy shoulders. "They change the farm program the way I change socks. Before you can get your meetin' over with, they'll be callin' you from Washington to tell you it's all different."Nicholson sagged a little. "You didn't come for the meeting, then?"Flagg shook his head. "I come up huntin' the judge. They sent me a call for jury duty and I got a shearin' crew comin' tomorrow. Court can wait, but a shearin' crew won't."Nicholson saw that the postcard in Flagg's pocket was not the one he had mailed. "Well, I still say you'll be in to see me someday, Mister Flagg."Flagg's gaze was steady and without compromise. "What I can't do for myself, I'll do without."A short, stocky ranchman came up the stairs in time to catch the last of it. He paused to spit a long stream of brown tobacco juice at a hallway cuspidor, getting most of it in. "You're preachin' again, Charlie," he grinned, "and this ain't even church."Charlie Flagg turned, a little embarrassed. "Hello, Rounder. I didn't go to preach, but he asked me and I told him."Rounder Pike laid a rough hand on Flagg's shoulder. "You're fartin' against the wind, Charlie. We've got used to government money like a kid gets used to candy. Most people wouldn't quit takin' it now. Them as did would go right on payin' the same old taxes and not get nothin' back. We're like a woman that's been talked into a little taste of sin and found out she likes it. You'd just as well join the crowd. You're payin' the freight anyway.""Never.""Never is an awful long time." Pike gripped Flagg's shoulder, then walked on into the courtroom.Nicholson motioned toward the door. "There's plenty of room, Mister Flagg."Flagg started to turn away. "You'll find, Mister Nicholson, that ranchers are contrary people. And old ranchers are awful contrary." He limped down the hall toward the office of the county judge.Nicholson's supervisor had come out into the hallway to listen. He said, "One of those rugged individualists, isn't he?""Someday he'll just be a ragged individualist. He's standing still while time goes on by. But he'll be in to see me one of these days. He'll come in like all the rest."The supervisor frowned, watching the rancher go through an open door. "Somehow, I hope he never does."Nicholson's eyebrows went up.The supervisor said, "He's gone out of style, but theworld will be a poorer place when it loses the last of his kind.""You sympathize with him?""I pity him, a little. A man can get awfully lonesome standing out there all by himself."Copyright © 1973, 1984 by Elmer Kelton
Continues...
Excerpted from The Time It Never Rained by Elmer Kelton Copyright © 2008 by Elmer Kelton. Excerpted by permission.
All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site.
Product details
- Publisher : Forge Books; First Edition (April 1, 2008)
- Language : English
- Mass Market Paperback : 416 pages
- ISBN-10 : 0765360586
- ISBN-13 : 978-0765360588
- Item Weight : 7 ounces
- Dimensions : 4.2 x 1.11 x 6.81 inches
- Best Sellers Rank: #623,948 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #9,750 in Westerns (Books)
- #34,738 in American Literature (Books)
- Customer Reviews:
About the author

ELMER KELTON (1926-2009) was the seven-time Spur Award-winning author of more than forty novels, and the recipient of the Owen Wister Lifetime Achievement award. He grew up on a ranch near Crane, Texas, and earned a journalism degree from the University of Texas. Among his awards have been seven Spurs from Western Writers of America and four Western Heritage awards from the National Cowboy Hall of Fame. The Good Old Boys was made into a television film starring Tommy Lee Jones. In addition to his novels, Kelton worked as an agricultural journalist for forty-two years, and served in the infantry in World War II. He passed away in 2009.
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Customers find this book an epic recounting of day-to-day life in west Texas, with believable characters and vivid descriptions. The writing style is easy to read, and customers consider it one of the best books for understanding the region. They appreciate the book's thought-provoking nature and its portrayal of human resolve in the face of adversity. The book receives positive feedback for its visual quality, with one customer noting its detailed look at historical weather patterns.
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Customers praise the book's storytelling, describing it as an epic recounting of day-to-day life in west Texas, with one customer highlighting it as the best account of a real-life rancher.
"...it has been dead for eighty years -- but it does take you very realistically into another world...." Read more
"...up on a ranch and in a cattle auction and this is the best account of a real life rancher I’ve ever read...." Read more
"...It’s a good story with a great protagonist, and interesting themes about Mexican/Texan relationships and government/economic..." Read more
"...Nice to have a go to author that can capture the sense of place and build characters that are a part of the Cowboy culture." Read more
Customers appreciate the character development in the book, finding them believable, with one customer noting how it beautifully portrays Charlie Flagg's sacrifices and another highlighting the delicate relationship between farmer and rancher.
"...This is a great novel, with a wonderfully stubborn and decent lead character, Charlie Flagg, determined to see the drought through without help from..." Read more
"...It’s a good story with a great protagonist, and interesting themes about Mexican/Texan relationships and government/economic..." Read more
"...to have a go to author that can capture the sense of place and build characters that are a part of the Cowboy culture." Read more
"...Texas, The Time It Never Rained is timeless, and beautifully portrays Charlie Flagg's sacrifices and struggles in the context of family, self,..." Read more
Customers find the book highly readable, particularly for understanding West Texas and drought conditions.
"...This book will always be near and dear to my heart. And maybe it's my Texas pride, but it's up in my top 10 favorite books for sure!" Read more
"...on "top conservative" booklists, is deeply sympathetic to the plight of the illegal immigrants...." Read more
"...and even though it was written more than thirty years ago it is a dead on analysis of what the country is going through today...." Read more
"...of writing by a master that knew the subject matter extremely well..The tiny details take me back to my youth....The only complaint I have is the..." Read more
Customers praise the writing style of the book, finding it excellent and easy to read, with one customer noting the author's skill in telling stories of the old West.
"...His writing style and knowledge of the life of the small time rancher took me back to the shearing shed, the meetings with the banker that enabled..." Read more
"Great writer and even better storyteller. Never read him until now and I'm glad I did. Stories about Texas always interest me." Read more
"...of writing by a master that knew the subject matter extremely well..The tiny details take me back to my youth....The only complaint I have is the..." Read more
"...He told me that Mr Kelton is an amazing writer. The book captured his attention immediately...." Read more
Customers find the book thought-provoking, with one customer noting it's filled with interesting people and activities, while another mentions it makes readers stop and think.
"...testament to the book and its author, then, that I was thoroughly engaged by this world and the characters who inhabit it...." Read more
"...There are also interesting parts of the book too, dealing with the treatment of Mexicans by whites, perhaps the first book since McMurtry's Hud to..." Read more
"...There are so many heartfelt life lessons in this book that brought back so many memories of the meaningful conversations I've had with my dad and..." Read more
"...Educational also, I recommend you read it." Read more
Customers appreciate the book's portrayal of determination and endurance, with one customer describing it as a wonderful tale of a stubborn cattle rancher with high principles.
"...This is a great novel, with a wonderfully stubborn and decent lead character, Charlie Flagg, determined to see the drought through without help from..." Read more
"...As a born and raised small town Texan, this book really captures the stubborn, independent, old school ways that my dad raised me with, and his dad..." Read more
"...novel he gives a story of a particularly honest, fair, but stubborn cattle rancher who has to deal with a six-year drought...." Read more
"Kelton's Charlie is a strong man of very high principles who is confounded by others who may not share his idea of honor...." Read more
Customers appreciate the visual quality of the book, describing it as vivid, with one customer noting it provides a true picture of Texas ranchers and another highlighting its detailed look at historical weather patterns.
"...Kelton wrote with a simple, direct elegance, unhurried, sometimes even spare...." Read more
"Great book - a deep look and feel into the life of a rancher and his community, dealing with a long Texas drought. Relevant." Read more
"...come alive in the pages and their relationships are so real and so vibrant that this book scores a solid five stars...." Read more
"...It is a true picture of Texas ranchers caught in changing times and hard times, describing the decimating effect of the drought on the people, the..." Read more
Customers appreciate the western genre of the book, with one customer noting it's not your typical western and another mentioning it's their first western book.
"...The world could use more Chalie Flaggs. This is a modern western -- no gunplay, no range wars, and the only Comanche Indian in it has been dead..." Read more
"I'm mostly a fantasy book reader, this is the first western book I've ever read...." Read more
"...Not your typical western. This is the best place to start reading Kelton...." Read more
"...And this is one of my favorite western books!" Read more
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Top reviews from the United States
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- Reviewed in the United States on July 19, 2017The subject of this book- the culture and politics of mid century ranching in West Texas- holds no special interest for me. It is all the more compelling testament to the book and its author, then, that I was thoroughly engaged by this world and the characters who inhabit it. I can't think of a better way to say it than that it rang true to me.
***SPOILERS***
By way of mild criticism, I wish the story had had at least something to say about Charlie's upbringing, his father, his mother, his early experiences. That ethos of his didn't come from nowhere, someone must have given it to him.
Moreover, I was very unsatisfied with the ending. I did want a happy ending, I admit, but I was prepared for it to end with Tom's demise by one means or another, in fact it felt like it was setting up for that. What I disliked about the ending is more that it was really hardly an ending at all. Besides Page Mauldin, it seemed as if all the loose threads were left hanging. Did Manuel and Kathy cultivate a romance? Did Teofilo pass away? Did Chuy get out from under the shearing machine? Did he continue to harden his heart in hatred, or did he soften? Bess Winfield? Rio Seco itself? The ranch? Charlie? Mary? All these unanswered questions. I felt like they deserved a closure that they weren't given.
One more, very minor criticism. I would have liked to know details like exactly what year events in the book take place- am I imagining the radio broadcast in the background talking about MacArthur's landing on Inchon, or McCarthy's witch hunt? Additionally, I wanted to know the years and makes of all the vehicles mentioned- Mauldin's black Cadillac, what model year was it? They changed quite a bit over the course of several years. The old pickup, was it a Studebaker? Dodge? GMC? Ford? What year? It just helps me form a more complete picture in my mind.
- Reviewed in the United States on September 7, 2013Long before anyone had heard of online shopping or even personal computers for that matter, I had a favorite bookstore, the largest in Chicago, part of a local chain. Squeezed out by discounters, the store, and the entire business went belly up about twenty years ago, when Amazon had barely been born. The store had a category of books it called "Men's Adventure," all paperbacks, and populated by the books of two authors, Louis L'Amour and somebody named William Johnstone, who wrote the Man Mountain books. That was it, two authors. There wasn't a lot of demand for western novelists in the City of Big Shoulders, I guess.
I never dipped into Johnstone, but read a few L'Amour books after 60 Minutes did a segment on him, and it was revealed that he was Ronald Reagan's favorite novelist. Great Presidents can be lousy critics. I gave up on L'Amour after I realized I could not distinguish one story from another, one hero from another, or one brutally written page from another. I had not read a western novel since, with the exception of some by Larry McMurtry, who is thought of not as a western writer, but a general novelist, probably because many of his books are so long. The paperback editions of his novels rested in a completely different area of that old bookstore.
It was a writer in my favorite political magazine who penned a blurb praising The Time It Never Rained by Elmer Kelton, and its theme of self-reliance that spurred me to read the book. Even then, I could not imagine how the story of a Texas drought would keep my interest. I was wrong, guilty of urban conceit, and should probably be punished by being docked wages for a day or two. Good thing I work for myself.
This is a great novel, with a wonderfully stubborn and decent lead character, Charlie Flagg, determined to see the drought through without help from the government. The idea of accepting help from the feds is anathema to Charlie, and a violation of his personal beliefs. There are also interesting parts of the book too, dealing with the treatment of Mexicans by whites, perhaps the first book since McMurtry's Hud to cross the subject of interracial relations between the two.
Kelton wrote with a simple, direct elegance, unhurried, sometimes even spare. The author I can most compare him to was not a novelist at all, but Ulysses S. Grant, whose Personal Memoirs evoke the same style. Both men wrote of what they knew best, Grant war, Kelton the West. The man whose strategy won the Civil War was a reluctant author, writing the Memoirs only because, broke and dying, he wanted to provide for his family. Kelton, a writer all his professional life, fought in, but never led in a war, and never made it into the history books. The thing he did was stir the reader's heart and teach us to respect and love the real working cowboy, not the ones swathed in dramatic mythology. For Elmer Kelton, that was enough.
- Reviewed in the United States on February 2, 2013If you ever want to know what it's REALLY like to be a rancher living in tough times, this is the book for you. Kelton is almost like James Michener; you know he's basing this book on real-life events and real people he knew. He just knows too much, too deeply, for that not to be the case. And his protagonist Charlie Flagg, while not without his flaws, is a deeply admirable man. As in all good westerns, he lives by a code, and he'll succeed or fail, live or die, by that code. The world could use more Chalie Flaggs.
This is a modern western -- no gunplay, no range wars, and the only Comanche Indian in it has been dead for eighty years -- but it does take you very realistically into another world. I'll say this: You must have to love the land and the animals raised on it an awful lot to try to wrest a living from what can be such a harsh, unforgiving Nature (and with the government most definitely not on your side either). Very good book (even if it does leave you talking in laconic, folksy-colorful West Texas jargon for a couple of days).
- Reviewed in the United States on April 6, 2025There are 2 things that will destroy us with absolutely no regret. Nature and Government. That is what this book is all about. Read it, please.
- Reviewed in the United States on December 25, 2023I grew up on a ranch and in a cattle auction and this is the best account of a real life rancher I’ve ever read. I grew up hearing stories about the 50’s drought in Texas and this brought it to real life for me. Like so many others, I’m convinced Charlie is based from my grandfather whose determination, whit, and self-reliance match that of Charlie’s. One of the best written American books I’ve ever read.
- Reviewed in the United States on July 25, 2022Kelton's book brings back vivid memories of my family's experience of the seven year drought in Texas. His writing style and knowledge of the life of the small time rancher took me back to the shearing shed, the meetings with the banker that enabled us to hold on, and the heartache of dealing with the unpredictably of the weather. This is the second time I have read it, and our region is once again in the grips of severe drought. The book is a masterpiece!
Top reviews from other countries
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der cunctatorReviewed in Germany on February 5, 2021
5.0 out of 5 stars Kein Western
Roman,der in den 1950er Jahren spielt und wohl auch autobiographische Züge von Kelton trägt. Wer einen Western sucht,sollte sein Geld sparen.
- Kindle CustomerReviewed in the United Kingdom on September 13, 2009
5.0 out of 5 stars A wonderful character and a great writer
I was reading 'The Time it Never Rained' only to read the author's sad obituary in the press.
I had bought the book to reconnect with my childhood memories of cowboy films, but this has little to do with John Wayne.
In fact Kelton's novel is about natural events taking control and his main character's reactions to these situations.As such the author's careful characterisation and slow narrative build-up is truthful and honest. There are no cheap tricks or devices in Kelton's writing - believable fiction a joy to read.
- JanReviewed in the United Kingdom on January 1, 2016
5.0 out of 5 stars Impressive
I couldn't put the book down. Kelton was a master of words, his style is so rich and yet understated. He had a great ear for dialogue. And his characters are really alive and three-dimensional. I really did forget this.was fiction. Another amazing thing about this.book.was that nothing seemed superfluous - not one sentence, not one word. Everything was just right. I'm sure I will reread this book and that doesn't happen very often with me.