Synopsis/blurb………
Crider’s prose slices
through conventions and expectations,” –Booklist
OUTRAGE AT BLANCO
It’s True Grit meets
Gran Torino in a blazingly original crime novel from Bill Crider, an Edgar and
Shamus finalist and a two-time winner of the Anthony Award
On a bloody day in
1887, death came to Blanco, Texas.
Before the sun went
down, the livery stable was torched, an outlaw gang robbed the bank, two men
were killed, and young newlywed Ellie Taine was raped. One of the dead was the
man who planned the robbery – the son of dying, legendary Texas Ranger Jonathan
Crossland – the other was Ellie’s husband, an innocent bystander.
The dead don’t know
fear.
Ellie is dead inside.
She takes a gun and rides out after the desperadoes, cold-blooded and fearless,
determined to kill the men who ruined her life. She’s joined by Jonathan
Crossland, who only has days left to live… but would rather die in his saddle
making amends for his son than rot in his bed. Together, Ellie and Jonathan set
out on a mission of vengeance and justice, one that neither of them expects nor
hopes to survive.
“In the hands of Bill
Crider, noir seems as atmospheric and doomful as ever,” Publisher’s Weekly
"Bill Crider is
one of the most unpretentious and versatile pure entertainers in the mystery
field." Ellery Queen's Mystery Magazine
A 1998 book from Bill Crider and an absolute blast. A dark Western-cum-crime novel that starts
ferociously with an attack and rape of Ellie Taine and never really lets up
throughout.
Naively and ill-equipped for the task in hand, Ellie’s husband
sets out after the culprits and soon perishes whilst they are in the middle of a
bank robbery. Something inside Ellie has broken and she decides to pursue the
gang herself and get herself a bit of frontier justice.
Great time frame and setting for this, interesting plot which
soon sees Ellie teaming up with Jonathan Crossland – a man with more than foot
in the grave already – on their chase, an interesting bunch of characters, not
the least of which is Irish villain, Daniel O’Grady. O’Grady is the most likeable
of our bunch of desperadoes and didn't have any involvement in the earlier
rape. Moments of humour as well, especially when our thieves fall out and cross paths again.
Whilst empathising with Ellie Taine and wanting her to achieve closure, I had a hankering for O’Grady to live to fight another day. A satisfactory ending that ticked all the boxes for me.
5 from 5 and a scratch of the head, where has Bill Crider
been all my reading life?
Crider originally
had this published back in 1998. He released a follow up – Texas Vigilante in 1999. One to keep an eye out for I think.
Bill Crider has been a fairly prolific author over the years
with a 20 plus book series starring Sheriff Dan Rhodes, as well as many others.
I do wish I had discovered him 10 years ago though.
His website is here.
I got hold of Outrage at Blanco via Net Galley. One of my
favourite publishers - Brash Books have brought this and Texas Vigilante back
into print.
Col - Crider really is talented. He 's written other Western mysteries too that I hope you'll get the chance to read at some point. Glad you enjoyed this one.
ReplyDeleteMargot - agreed. I don't have anything else from him on the pile unfortunately, but maybe when the stacks have been thinned a bit.....ooh say in another 5 years or so!
DeleteThanks for the kind words!
ReplyDeleteBill - thanks so much for stopping by. Apologies for being 15 years or so late to the party!
DeleteBill Crider is one of my favorite writers. The only problem with him is that he doesn't write fast enough! I want more...
ReplyDeleteLes - I'm a late comer to his work, I have punched myself in the side of the head a few times! I'll at least try to get to the TEXAS VIGILANTE book, but after that I might run out of time - what with all the other stuff I have. ;-(
DeleteThanks for the review, Col!
ReplyDeleteYou're welcome, it's a great book>
DeleteGreat review, Col. This sounds like maybe too gritty for me but I might try it anyway. My plan was to try a book in the Dan Rhodes series first though.
ReplyDeleteThanks - you may be right on the gritty quota. The Dan Rhodes series sound great but at 20 plus books........I'm kind of torn. Logically I don't need anything else, but I'm always having my head turned.
DeleteCol, great review of a book by a seasoned writer and blogger I admire. I have been meaning to tuck into Bill Crider's Sheriff Dan Rhodes mysteries.
ReplyDeleteA friend over on Goodreads advised me Texas Vigilante is available on Net Galley - so I have downloaded a review copy. Good luck with Dan Rhodes.
DeleteDon't know author or book, but it does sound good. But I can't embark on Westerns as well at my time of life! Glad you enjoyed it though, a 5 on 5 is always good.
ReplyDeleteMoira, never too old for the Wild Wild West! You could choose his Dan Rhodes series, like Tracy and Prashant?
Delete