A Family Saga in the American Southwest

 

The Oakley family lives in a farm along Little Hatchet Creek, New Mexico Territory in the postwar years of the American Civil War. They raise hogs, achieving modest prosperity selling bacon and ham in El Paso.

Little Hatchet by Phil Oakley, opens in the 1880s along the Little Hatchet Creek and runs through the 1920s. It follows the fortunes of the Oakley clan in New Mexico and Texas.

Father, James, is a Civil War veteran. A former Confederate officer, he and his wife Rebecca left Arkansas to settle along Little Hatchet Creek, raising a family along with the hogs. As the book starts the family includes five sons and two daughters.

It opens with the farm raided by a Mescalero war party.  The Indians steal horses and the Oakley’s youngest child, Matthew, a baby. James and oldest son Walter ride to recover the child, peacefully by riding boldly into the Mescalero camp, establishing an odd friendship between the Oakleys and the tribe.

The book primarily follows the exploits of oldest son, Walter. Father James serves as his advisor, but James never pushes Walter to live out James’s dreams of becoming an engineer.  Walter becomes a surveyor for the Southern Pacific Railroad, then a carpenter for them, and finally an independent building contractor before returning to farming, raising hogs as his father did. Along the way he marries Ada and starts his own family.

The story takes place on a vast backdrop, the deserts of New Mexico, the Little Hatchet Mountains, the Texas Plains between El Paso and San Antonio, the Texas Hill Country and the Big Bend country between the Rio Grande and the Southern Pacific line serve as stages for the action. Walter fights Indians, scraps with Anglo ruffians and matches wits with Mexican bandits.

Walter becomes a respected member of his community, eventually being elected justice of the peace. His two oldest sons Ralph and Glenn take darker turns. Ralph transforms from a football hero to a greedy and narcissistic bully, while Glenn becomes a drug-addicted bootlegger and smuggler. Walter blames his failings as a father for their shortcomings.

Little Hatchet is a panoramic novel, following America as it grows from the 1890s Old West years to early Twentieth Century America. The book is the first of a series of novels about the Oakley clan. If the next is as good as this one, it will be worthwhile reading.

“Little Hatchet,” by Phil Oakley, Stoney Creek Publishing Group, March, 2024, 308 pages, $24.95 (Paperback), $699 (E-book)

This review was written by Mark Lardas, who writes at Ricochet as Seawriter. Mark Lardas, an engineer, freelance writer, historian, and model-maker, lives in League City, TX. His website is marklardas.com.

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  1. David Carroll Thatcher
    David Carroll
    @DavidCarroll

    @seawriter

    Mark, I enjoy your reviews, but this one left me a bit in the dark.  You  conclude, “If the next is as good as this one, it will be worthwhile reading.”  While you describe that general tenor of the story, I am unsure what you found to be good about it.  Was it the quality of the writing?  Was it the development of the characters, e.g., lovable, engaging? quirky? conflicted? etc.)  Was the story compelling?  Did it have cliff hangers that keep the reader turning pages?  Was it a feel-good story? 

    Thanks for sharing these reviews, but I am unsure about this book without understanding what you liked about it.    

    • #1
  2. Seawriter Contributor
    Seawriter
    @Seawriter

    David Carroll (View Comment):
    Mark, I enjoy your reviews, but this one left me a bit in the dark.  You  conclude, “If the next is as good as this one, it will be worthwhile reading.”  While you describe that general tenor of the story, I am unsure what you found to be good about it.  Was it the quality of the writing?  Was it the development of the characters, e.g., lovable, engaging? quirky? conflicted? etc.)  Was the story compelling?  Did it have cliff hangers that keep the reader turning pages?  Was it a feel-good story? 

    Um . . . it was an entertaining read. 

    • #2
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