THE TRAILSMAN #362
By Jon Sharpe
Signet, December 2011
All Skye Fargo wants is to get to Dallas and reunite with a
lovely lady. But when he rides through Hermanos Valley, he heads into a war
zone. For generations, sheepherders have raised their flocks on the fertile
land. Now powerful cattle drivers are staking out the valley as their own – and
they’ve got the guns to back up their claims. But they’re not about to pull the
wool over the Trailsman’s eyes.
The Guadalupes, New Mexico, 1859 – where lonely summits
loom over a forbidding land of the lawless.
Reading the above blurb,
taken from the back of the book, you might think this is going to be your
typical range war type novel, but that couldn’t be further from the truth. Yes
there is a range war brewing but that is just the backbone to the story…
Something is
indiscriminately tearing the throats out of sheep, cattle, and human beings.
It’s this creature that Fargo agrees to hunt down and exterminate, and in the
process manages to make enemies on both sides.
It’s during the many
attempts to trail the creature that becomes known as The Hound, that the author
piles on the suspense, as the hunters become the hunted. Fleeting glimpses of
The Hound and the tracks it leaves paint an image of an animal unlike any other
Fargo has come across.
The author – in this case
David Robbins writing as Jon Sharpe – really builds up the tension in
nail-biting scenes that kept me glued to the pages, making this a very
difficult book to put down. Not just my need to discover what The Hound really
was kept me reading, but my wanting to know whether the sheepherders or
cattlemen would eventually claim the valley – if any of them were left alive to
do so by the end.
The book is peopled with
great characters, such as Carlos. The dialogue crackles, and at times is
superbly sarcastic, which makes for some very humorous comments.
Descriptions are vivid and at times quite brutal, and the action comes thick
and fast. All this makes for a Trailsman book not to miss.
Range War also introduces
readers to a new cover design.
2 comments:
Steve, Thank you for your kind review. Range wars have been done 'so' many times. I wanted to avoid the cliches. From your review, sounds like the story kept you entertained. :) David
Nice review. I'm afraid I haven't re read these, although they sound exciting.
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