British edition, Vol. 9, No. 12
Contents:
Featured Novelette
Holdup at Stony Flat
By Clair Huffaker
Taw was being framed, Christine warned . . . but how could he believe a woman who had already betrayed her own husband?
Short Stories
To the Last Man
By Ben Frank
A man should be ready to shoot, if need be, to uphold his family’s honor . . . but Johnny had to have a better reason before he could kill.
Track the Man Down
By Robert J. Hogan
Grace was all the things Vermilion Smith wanted in a woman . . . and the sister of the man he had to shoot on sight.
Fair Warning
By Larry Powell
To Dave Morris, there was a right and a wrong way to act . . . even if doing the right thing meant he would have to kill a man.
As far as I understand it, Thrilling Western continued in the UK after its original American run came to an end. This is one of those later issues. Were the stories written for the UK publication? Nope, they are taken from other American pulps, namely Ranch Romances. The first three stories all coming from the April 1957 issue of Ranch Romances and the final tale from the November 1956 issue.
I’ve included the cover of the April 1957 issue of Ranch Romances as it shows how the cover art has also been re-used too, or at least a new version of it painted – if you look at them closely, you’ll see there are a number of differences between the two.
But what of the stories themselves? I’ve read work by three
of these authors before, the odd one out being Larry Powell. Ben Frank (r.n.
Frank Bennett) I’ve only read in a similar pulp, whilst the other two I’ve read
in full length books and greatly enjoyed, so I was really looking forward to
trying some of their earlier work.
I found all four tales to be entertaining reads, but did enjoy those by
Huffaker and Hogan more than the other two. I do wonder if this is because
Frank and Powell’s tales are much shorter so their storylines weren’t as
complex. Hogan’s tale had the most memorable ending for me due to its
hard-hitting nature. To say all these tales came from a publication with
romance in the title I did wonder whether they would be more of a love story
than an action packed western but this wasn’t the case. Yes, all the tales have
some element of romance but they are traditional westerns filled with twisting
plots and plenty of gunplay. On the strength of these four stories, I’ll
certainly be on the lookout for more work by all the authors.
I have quite a few western pulps and my enjoyment of this one has me eager to
read some more as they certainly contain some first-class western
entertainment.
It would be remiss for me not to add some further comments about the Huffaker
novelette, Holdup at Stony Flat. This would later become a full-length novel
under the title of Badman which was published in 1958, the year after it first
appeared in its original shorter form. Later, in 1962, Huffaker wrote a
screenplay based on Badman and in 1967 the film The War Wagon was released,
directed by Burt Kennedy, it starred John Wayne and Kirk Douglas. Later
publications of the book saw it have a name change to The War Wagon.
Although I have the full-length book version, I’ve never read it, so what has been added to lengthen the tale I couldn’t say. It’s also been many
years since I saw the film and I don’t remember much about it, but from what I
can gather it differs quite significantly after the opening scene which closely
portrays the start of the original short-story.
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