Readers
of the popular, award-winning Rancho
Diablo Western series
have good reason to rejoice. Not only does MATAMOROS BULL mark a new,
much-anticipated entry (ninth overall and the first one in four
years), but it is an outstanding adventure well worth the wait.
What's more, according to the author's note preceding the story,
we've got three more titles (including a soon-to-be-released novella)
to look forward to, coming in rapid order. The novel-length
works—excluding the novella and starting with MATAMOROS BULL—will
comprise a trilogy called “Storm Season” during which various
members of the Rancho Diablo cast will be caught up in adventures
that draw them away from the ranch itself.
As
followers of the series likely already know, one of its unique
features is that the titles to date have been written by three
top-notch authors—James Reasoner, Bill Crider, and Mel Odom—all
sharing the “Colby Jackson” byline and contributing different
entries. This time around (as well as for the aforementioned novella
and all of the “Storm Season” trilogy) it is Mr. Odom behind the
curtain and, as already mentioned, he turns in a bravura performance.
Although
many of the Flying D regulars we are familiar with from past
adventures (Sam Blaylock, boss of the ranch and patriarch of the
Blaylock family; Mike Tucker, his long time friend and right hand
man; Gaby Darbins, another old friend and chuck wagon cook, etc.) are
present here, it is Sam's youngest son Elijah who takes center stage
for most of MATAMOROS BULL. He is a fifteen-year-old boy accompanying
his father and a handful of wranglers on a trip into Old Mexico to
buy a special breeding bull for the ranch. The adventures he
experiences—both as part of the ranch outfit and, more importantly,
when separated from the others—is a coming of age tale that is
exciting, sometimes humorous, often dangerous, at times poignant, and
plays out at a breakneck pace. Much of what Elijah has to deal with
revolves around protecting his father's prize bull and trying to come
to grips with his personal feelings for the lovely, sassy, ever
challenging Ofelia—a young Mexican beauty he meets down in Mexico.
In
a matter of only a few event-filled days, Elijah transitions from boy
to man—in the eyes of himself and many others—before this tale is
done, and makes his mark as a character we will be wanting to see
more of in future Rancho Diablo tales. But, at the same time, author
Jackson/Odom leaves Sam Blaylock and most of the rest of his crew in
a cliff-hanger of a situation that will make readers count the
minutes until we see what befalls them in the next episode,
tentatively titled GHOST TOWN GUNDOWN
Good
stuff. Strongly recommended!
Thanks for the great review, Wayne. I picked up my copy and will read over the weekend. I enjoyed several of the Rancho Diablo books and Mel's writing in general.
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