I’ve often marveled at the mastery with which James Reasoner sets the
“hook” for his stories --- it absolutely *compels* the reader to want to
find out what happens next. And what comes next in anything from
Reasoner, of course, is never a disappointment. THE LAST WAR CHIEF is
yet another fine example of this – on both counts.
The opening
passages introduce us to the central figure of this tale. He goes by
many names: To the folks of Dinsmore, Texas, he is the pathetic town
drunk they call Old Pete or, occasionally, by his translated Indian name
of Three Horses. His true Indian name is Pahitti Puuku. But in his
mind, liquor-addled though it may be, he is The Last War Chief of the
Commanche.
It takes the arrival in Dinsmore of a ruthless gang of
killers and bank robbers, led by vicious Clete Fenner, to reawaken the
warrior chief who has been all but drowned by the booze Three Horses has
been pouring into himself. After the gang robs the Dinsmore bank, kills
the town lawmen, shoots up other innocents, and leaves Three Horses
lying in the dirt, beaten and publicly humiliated, something angry and
determined rises up in the old man. He vows The Last War Chief will ride
and fight again.
When the Outlaw Ranger, G.W. Braddock, shows up on
the trail of the Fenner gang, Three Horses is fiercely intent on riding
with him after the robber/killers. Braddock refuses the offer of help as
firmly but delicately as possible, yet Three Horses won’t take no for
an answer. Circumstances out on the trail finally unite the pair in a
way that Braddock can’t deny and they ultimately close in on the outlaws
together.
The conclusion is stirring, bittersweet, and altogether satisfying.
A
great Western yarn, with more complexities and emotions than the
standard fare, though still delivering plenty of gritty action.
Strongly recommended.
Wednesday, July 22, 2015
Friday, July 17, 2015
Available Now – The Lawyer: THE RETRIBUTIONERS by Wayne D. Dundee
J.D. Miller, aka
The Lawyer, continues to hunt the men that slaughtered his family. His next
target is Jules Despare who’s been riding with the Selkirk gang robbing banks.
When the town of Emmett, Texas, is marked by the hardcases and the local
marshal murdered, The Lawyer is asked by the town’s influential residents to
track down the reprehensible outfit. But he has little use for the
narrow-minded bigots that won’t stand behind the remaining deputy—a black man
named Ernest Tell. After Tell resigns, he suggests a partnership with The
Lawyer who refuses. It’s obvious, though, these two avengers are gunning for
the same men and will eventually work together to settle old scores in THE
RETRIBUTIONERS.
Best-selling, Western hardboiled author Wayne D. Dundee (The Empty Badge, The Guns of Vedauwoo) pens his second Lawyer book that is based on characters created by Edward A. Grainger, author of the Cash Laramie and Gideon Miles series.
Best-selling, Western hardboiled author Wayne D. Dundee (The Empty Badge, The Guns of Vedauwoo) pens his second Lawyer book that is based on characters created by Edward A. Grainger, author of the Cash Laramie and Gideon Miles series.
WD
here: This is the second book I’ve done in ‘The Lawyer’ series based on characters
created by David Cranmer (aka Edward A. Grainger). I liked writing about this
character again, trying to dig a little deeper into his psyche beyond the
obvious quest for revenge that drives him. How could a man so previously
immersed in law and justice become such a lethal avenging angel? The answer, I
suggest, is that --- other than the matter of a “legal ruling” --- there really
isn’t a whole lot of difference between what we call ‘justice’ … or personal
vengeance or retribution. They’re all geared toward making someone pay for a
wrong committed. It’s just that, when it’s taken on as a personal matter, there
is no room for “legal loopholes”.
Which
also brings us to the title – THE RETRIBUTIONERS. As I explained to David when
I submitted the manuscript, I don’t even know if there is such a word. If there
isn’t, there should be. Number One, it conveys clearly what I was aiming for in
the story; Number Two, I have personally always loved tales of retribution in
books and movies; Number Three, I couldn’t help thinking that it sounded like
it might have been the title for an entry in one of my favorite series --- the Matt
Helm books by Donald Hamilton. (Not meant to imply my writing is anywhere near
the level of Mr. Hamilton’s.)
I
hope you give THE RETRIBUTIONERS a try. I think you’ll like it.
Wednesday, July 15, 2015
Noteworthy Reads: DEVIL YOU KNOW by Richard Prosch
The Peregrine, John Coburn, is back in a pair of stories from Richard Prosch. Any way you cut it, that comes out as good news.
Prosch is one of my favorite authors and Coburn is one of my favorite series characters.
DEVIL YOU KNOW, the lead piece, is the longer (almost novella length) of the two and is a welcome return to the grimmer, tougher Peregrine readers first met in the earliest tales in the series. Prosch’s stylistic flair, an array of colorful characters, and some nice touches of humor are all in evidence but what I really liked was the toughness and the action. In particular, there was a prolonged brawl that was written about as exciting and well as that kind of thing can be done. Throw in a mystery element and some clever twists toward the end and you’ve got just about all you’d want from a story.
DEVIL’S BARGAIN, the secondary piece, is more lighthearted and features the return of Coburn’s sometimes sidekick Bandy Murphy, who has roped the Peregrine into a scheme that involves trying to sell a wagonload of fast-rotting eggs. It turns out the eggs aren’t the only thing smelling up the landscape when they run afoul (no pun intended) of some folks trying to work the old badger game on unsuspecting travelers. Good fun and, again, colorful characters with some clever twists and, as always, Prosch’s great writing.
Strongly recommended.
Prosch is one of my favorite authors and Coburn is one of my favorite series characters.
DEVIL YOU KNOW, the lead piece, is the longer (almost novella length) of the two and is a welcome return to the grimmer, tougher Peregrine readers first met in the earliest tales in the series. Prosch’s stylistic flair, an array of colorful characters, and some nice touches of humor are all in evidence but what I really liked was the toughness and the action. In particular, there was a prolonged brawl that was written about as exciting and well as that kind of thing can be done. Throw in a mystery element and some clever twists toward the end and you’ve got just about all you’d want from a story.
DEVIL’S BARGAIN, the secondary piece, is more lighthearted and features the return of Coburn’s sometimes sidekick Bandy Murphy, who has roped the Peregrine into a scheme that involves trying to sell a wagonload of fast-rotting eggs. It turns out the eggs aren’t the only thing smelling up the landscape when they run afoul (no pun intended) of some folks trying to work the old badger game on unsuspecting travelers. Good fun and, again, colorful characters with some clever twists and, as always, Prosch’s great writing.
Strongly recommended.
Monday, July 13, 2015
The Emptiness of JULY
Upon
reflection I have come to realize that, for me, the month of July no longer
holds the attraction of being a time filled with sunny days, carefree outdoor
activities, and a sense of summer’s bright heart and the exuberance of youth that
it used to call forth.
I
guess it started with the dimming of July’s brightest heart --- my late wife
Pam, who was born on July 14 but has been gone now for over eight years. It’s
awkward and hard to “celebrate” the birthday of someone who has passed, but
every year at this time I tell myself that what I’m celebrating is the fact she
*was* born and thereby was able to be at my side for 41-plus years, making my
time with her the best part of my life … That’s what I tell myself. But the
empty place beside me is always there to remind me that she nevertheless is
gone.
This
year, the awareness of the emptiness surrounding me has only widened and
deepened. Others are gone … either permanently or in different ways.
Bear,
the little half-blind, partially crippled poodle that was the last of “Pam’s
dogs” she left behind for me to care for finally got so weak and sick that in
March I had to put him down. Pardon me if it seems silly to include the loss of
a dog in this, but Pam’s “babies” were very precious to her (there were three
of them – Buttercup and Peanut being the other two) and I took my obligation to
care for them in her absence very seriously. Bear may have been her favorite,
and losing him was like another part of her that I had to let go of.
July
4th marked the first anniversary of C.J. Henderson’s passing.
In
January we lost John Duncklee.
In
May we all lost Ron Scheer.
Just
this past week we lost Tom Piccirilli and Randy Johnson (not the baseball
pitcher).
These
last four men I never met in person but knew them only through their work and/or
social media. Funny how strong a kinship you can come to feel for some folks
you never laid eyes on. And while the emptiness of their passing my not be as profound
as the loss of a close relative or loved one, it still adds up.
The
real kicker to start off the month was when my only daughter Michelle,
son-in-law, grandkids, and great granddaughter decided to pull stakes and move
to the state of Washington. When Pam and I moved to Ogallala in 1998, we bought
a house that was built like a two-family structure --- i.e. the basement had its
own kitchen, bathroom, living room, and four bedrooms. Pam hated to hear it,
but I always joked that it was our “fall back” position in case we fell on hard
times in our old age and had to rent out either the upstairs or down … Little
did I know that “hard times” would come in the form of losing her. After that,
I invited Michelle and her family to move in up upstairs. It made a financial
break for both of us and, although there were times we intruded on one another,
it worked out pretty well. Now that is gone, too.
Bill,
my oldest grandson, is sticking with me like he’s done right along. This fall
or winter, when it’s cooler, we may move upstairs. But there’ll be no renting
out any part of the house. It’s a lot emptier, but we’ll keep it to ourselves.
I
can already tell that the holidays are going to be a lot different. The 4th
of July, for example, with no family picnic and watching evening fireworks with
nobody going “ooohh … ahhh” (something I used to tease Pam and Michelle
mercilessly about) just didn’t cut it.
I’m
not writing this for anybody to feel sorry for me.
I’m
a pretty tough old bird, I’ve made it this far and still have a few more miles
to go. And I always know there are a hell of a lot of other people who are far
worse off than me.
I’m
merely reflecting on the changes life brings as the years pass by, the things
and people we are forced to leave behind.
I
can’t say strongly enough to be sure and hang on tight to the things you care
about while you’ve still got ‘em. You never know …
As
for me, somebody once said that the word Lonely was invented for the rest of
the world; the word Solitude was invented for writers.
I’ve
always enjoyed – treasured, even – my solitude. Pam did, too. There were many
evenings, after dinner, when I’d go to my office to do some writing and she’d
kick back to watch TV in her easy chair, surrounded by her dogs, and we might
only say a handful of words to one another for the rest of the evening. But we
knew each other was there. A house *feels* different when there’s another
presence in it, even if the other person is nowhere in sight.
Now,
with Bill, thankfully, it’s sort of the same thing. After he gets home from
work and dinner is over, he generally goes to his room to get online with some
video gamer friends and I, as usual, go to my office to do some writing or
reading.
Solitude.
Not a bad thing.
But
the creeping, deepening sense of emptiness can be a bitch …
Sunday, July 12, 2015
Another Look: LAW AND ORDER (1953 Western starring Ronald Reagan)
I
caught this flick on cable the other night and was pleasantly surprised by how
tough, taut, and entertaining it was (apart from a wholly uninspired title). In
the lead role, Ronald Reagan plays Frame Johnson, a “town tamer” type lawman
who has already cleaned up several towns and, at the start of this film, has a
tight grip on Tombstone. Too tight, some say.
When
Johnson brings in yet another fugitive and then has to face down yet another lynch
mob, he decides he’s had enough. He hangs up his gun, takes off his badge, and
heads for the town of Cottonwood where he’s bought a ranch out in the country
where he aims to settle down life his life free from upholding the law and the
violence that comes with it. Accompanying him are his two brothers, Lute and
Jimmy; he leaves behind his lady love Jeannie, who has been refusing to marry
him while he was packing a badge, but they agree she will come as soon as he
has his new place ready.
No
surprise that, as soon as they hit Cottonwood, the Johnsons quickly find out it
is a hellhole of trouble and corruption under the thumb of one of Frame’s old
enemies, Kurt Durling, who has a crippled hand and a seething hatred for Frame thanks
to their last encounter. Gunfights, murder, lynching, and rustling all seem to
be commonplace in and around Cottonwood. But Frame --- despite the pleas of his
own brothers and pressure from a group of town elders who want him to take up
the badge again and clean up Cottonwood like he has so many places before ---
vows to stay out of it and tend strictly to getting his ranch ready so he can
send for Jeannie.
Needless
to say, the trouble only escalates. Finally, after one of his brothers is shot
when *he* puts on a badge to try and make things better, Frame straps on his
gun once more, pins on the badge of his fallen brother, and sets out to square
things.
The
results are violent and ultimately satisfying. The bad guys get theirs, the
good guys are left to pursue happier trails.
In
addition to some obvious (though very loose) parallels to the real life story
of Wyatt Earp and his brothers, this movie is based on a well-regarded book
entitled Saint Johnson, written by
novelist and famed screen writer W.R. Burnett. A version of the book was previously
filmed (and considered a “bigger” picture) in 1932, also under the LAW AND
ORDER title, starring Harry Carey and Walter Huston, with a screenplay co-written
by John Huston. I watched part of this one on You Tube and it seemed to be very
different than the Reagan version. Likely it stuck closer to Burnett’s book.
Still, if you have an hour and twenty minutes to spare, the 1953 version with
Reagan and company ain’t a bad way to spend it
Saturday, July 11, 2015
Noteworthy Reads: THE SHOTGUN RIDER by Peter Brandvold
Dag
Enberg is a troubled man; a big, tough, rawboned Norwegian whose only claim to
pride is that he’s the best damned man riding shotgun guard for Logan Cates’ stage
line. Otherwise, he only knows bitterness … the bitterness of his past and its
failures, the bitterness of knowing he can’t stay away from the bottle, and the
bitterness of being in love with the wrong woman.
But
a man like that can only be pushed so far. And if he’s pushed *too* far, all
that’s left is for the bitterness to eat its way to self-destruction … or self-discovery
of the real truth of what lies at his core.
This
is a tough, action-packed, insightful story of man dragged down nearly to the
bottom and then fighting his way back --- for himself, for his family honor,
and for the woman he truly loves.
This
is one of Mean Pete’s best … and that’s saying a lot.
Strongly
recommended!
Friday, July 10, 2015
Noteworthy Reads: BLAZE! ZOMBIES OVER YONDER
In
this sixth entry, by Steve Mertz --- veteran action/adventure writer and
concept creator of the BLAZE! series --- ZOMBIES OVER YONDER is a wild,
action-packed yarn that takes off like a shot and zips along like a well-aimed
bullet.
J.D.
and Kate Blaze, the Old West’s only man and wife team of gunfighters, are plying
their trade in a traditional manner at the start. When the fugitive they’re bringing
in for a reward makes a daring escape attempt with the aid of some hardcases
lying in wait at the train station, the attempt fails in a bloody shootout. But
before the rabid dog fugitive can be cut down, he ruthlessly blasts an innocent
young woman bystander. The Blazes feel a share of the guilt for her death. So,
based on a letter found on her body, they head for the remote town of Yonder to
make contact with the father she was on her way to visit and inform him of the
tragedy.
Once
J.D. and Kate get to Yonder, however, all hell --- literally --- breaks loose. They
find the father has also died under suspicious circumstances, his mine has been
taken over by the mysterious Count Vlad who employs not only has his own small
army of trigger-happy gunmen but also has the local U.S. Army colonel in his
pocket, and the nearby townsfolk live in cowering fear … not *just* from the
count and his gunnies but, more than anything, from the unseen yet terrifying “workers”
who toil deep in the mine.
Before
the Blazes can work things out and, just incidentally, save their own skins, plenty
more bullets will fly, corruption and curses will have to be dealt with … and
the dead will walk!
All
the Western sweep and excitement you could ask for, plus some spooky twists to
spur things along. Saddle up for the ride, you’ll enjoy it.