Synopsis/blurb……
There are monsters in
the West. There is evil, lurking in the blood-soaked hills and bone-strewn
plains. But there is also Hawthorne-scarred, enigmatic, deadly, driven by an
all-consuming rage to seek out and destroy evil wherever he finds it. Without
mercy.
But how long can one man fight the demons before becoming one himself?
HAWTHORNE: TALES OF A WEIRDER WEST features the stories "That Damned Coyote Hill," "The Long Black Train," "The Spider Tribe," "Bad Sanctuary," and "The Unholy" as well as an introduction by Western fiction legend James Reasoner.
But how long can one man fight the demons before becoming one himself?
HAWTHORNE: TALES OF A WEIRDER WEST features the stories "That Damned Coyote Hill," "The Long Black Train," "The Spider Tribe," "Bad Sanctuary," and "The Unholy" as well as an introduction by Western fiction legend James Reasoner.
About the Author
Heath Lowrance is the
author of City of Heretics, The Bastard Hand, and the story collection Dig Ten
Graves, as well as the Gideon Miles adventure "Miles to Little Ridge"
and the Fight Card novella "Bluff City Brawler" (as Jack Tunney).
He's lived in various places this side of the Mississippi River and currently
calls Lansing, Michigan, his home (although the desolate wilds of Wyoming sound
more and more appealing as he gets older). He's currently at work on more
Hawthorne stories, another Gideon Miles tale, and a third full-length novel.
An Amazon freebie a few weeks ago and another new
author for me to try as well as a trip into the territory of the western,
albeit of the short story variety with the constant - Hawthorne as the main
character.
Overall enjoyable, though if I’m honest the weird
supernatural elements carry far less appeal for me than a conventional gunslinger
rolling into town and wreaking havoc and mayhem and extracting a primitive
level of justice on the bad guys.
An interesting main character, though not someone I
feel compelled to read more about in the future. Great settings – Lowrance establishes
a real sense of time and place. (Note to self – read a few more westerns soon.)
Favourite story had the travelling sharpies with
their giant of a man-cum-boxer taking on all comers for money and swiftly despatching
them, until Hawthorne takes his turn in the ring.
Definitely an author to read more from in the
future – which is just as well as he’s already sat on my kindle.
4 from 5
Heath Lowrance has an intriguingly titled website - Psychonoir blogspot
Col, I missed this but I'll be picking it up and reading Heath Lowrance's other work too.
ReplyDeletePrashant, I reckon these would be right up your street.
DeleteCol - This does sound interesting. Like you, I'm generally not one for the supernatural. But that said, I do like authentic settings and non-stereotypical characters. Perhaps one to seek out...
ReplyDeleteMargot - I'll read more from him in the future, but without the supernatural elements.
DeleteThis book seems to combine a lot of different features, including a skeleton on the cover for Tracy! I'll probably settle for admiring those amazing titles...
ReplyDeleteOk Moira - no problem.
DeleteThe first thing I noticed was the skeleton on the cover, as Moira pointed out. I don't know what I think about supernatural Westerns, and I have a problem with short stories... but I may have to give these a try.
ReplyDeleteTracy, I thought you would like the cover, but the rest of it, I'm not too sure...
Delete