By Peter Brandvold
Berkley, September 2011
Cuno Massey killed those deputy U.S. marshals all right, but
only because they were about to rape the women he was escorting to safety.
Thrown into a federal penitentiary, he faces a death sentence – until the
beautiful Camilla and her cutthroat gang bust him out and head for the Mexican
border.
Pursued by lawmen as brutal as the desperadoes he travels
with, Cuno rides a bloody trail, unsure where his allegiances lie, and
wondering if he was better off waiting for the gallows….
Right from the very first line, “The bald giant’s first was
a battering ram” this book punches hard all the way until the end as Cuno
Massey finds himself riding a savage trail to freedom after being sprung from
prison in a violent jailbreak, even if freedom means becoming an outlaw
himself.
Of course being on the run means the law will do its best to
track Massey down and here we see the return of the Sheriff Mason who put
Massey behind bars in the previous book. But he isn’t the only lawman to make a
return appearance, for Peter Brandvold adds Spurr to the mix, the aging Deputy
U.S. Marshal I last read about in another of Pete’s series - the second book in
his Colter Farrow series, The Killers of Cimarron, written as Frank Leslie. I
thought Spurr made for an excellent character in that book so was very pleased
to see him in this one.
As well as struggling to stay alive Cuno Massey has to fight
with some tough personal issues regarding his new lifestyle. Can he be happy
living as an outlaw? Can he gun down people in cold blood, be they lawmen
chasing him or those he is robbing? And what of Camilla? Can he accept this new
side to her? These questions all see Peter Brandvold further developing the
character of Massey and as they aren’t all answered ensures that the reader
will be eager for the next book in the series: .45-Caliber Crossfire, out in
April 2012.
If you’ve never read a Cuno Massey book then this could well
be a good place to jump into the series as it seems to be a new beginning for
Massey. Peter Brandvold includes enough memories of Cuno’s past so a new reader
will have some idea as to Massey’s background.
For me, Peter Brandvold just keeps getting better and
better.
2 comments:
Thanks once again for the nice review, Steve. Just wanted to mention that ole Spurr is about to have his own personal series--"The Rusty Spurr Series." I finished Book 1 last month--THE LAST LAWMAN.
Gidyup!
Pete
Looking forward to it already Pete. Spurr is definitely a memorable character.
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