Thursday 2 May 2019

AUTHOR FAVOURITES: KILLER OF WITCHES by W. MICHAEL FARMER


W. Michael Farmer tells me KILLER OF WITCHES is probably his best work to date. It’s a Native American epic told first person by Yellow Boy, who we first meet as a 5 year old, one of the Mescalero Apaches fleeing their New Mexico reservation in 1865, and follow into manhood.

KILLER OF WITCHES mixes historical-based adventure with the supernatural. The Apache God Ussen, Creator of Life, gives to the boy gifts of power that include an ability to slay witches. Yellow Boy uses his gifts in his search for a witch called Blood of the Devil, whose head looks like a skull, and whose body is covered with black spiral and flame tattoos.


An Apache witch-woman

The Mescalero Apaches, ranging from central New Mexico to the Texas Big Bend and deep into northern Mexico, had elements of both the western (wickiup-dwelling, desert-living) Apaches and Plains (tipi-dwelling, buffalo-hunting) Indians in their culture.




They ate the roasted fruit of the mescal plant, and made liquor from it, which is why Spanish colonists named them the Mescaleros.




During the American Civil War the union army under GENERAL JAMES CARLETON fought against the Mescaleros.




His most effective field commander was KIT CARSON, the legendary mountain man and trail-blazer, who helped defeat them and corral them on the bleak Bosque Redondo Reservation – from which they fled, (as depicted at the beginning of KILLER OF WITCHES.) Some Mescaleros remained at large until the early 1880s.




KIT CARSON (1809 - 1868)

REVIEWS of KILLER OF WITCHES:

‘Michael Farmer gives voice to a new American hero - Yellow Boy, an Apache warrior whose riveting story from boyhood to manhood is fresh, passionate, and totally believable. With deep sensitivity and understanding of Apache culture, Farmer presents Yellow Boy, his family, and friends in all their rich, multidimensional complexity. What a pleasure to read a book from a Native American hero's perspective… Vivid details transport the reader to the novel's southwest setting.’

‘The characters are well-drawn and believable.’

‘A true joy.’

‘Wonderful read! Fascinating presentation of this story from the Apache point of view… Enjoyed this book immensely.’

‘Great read! I don't read historical fiction very often, but I loved every minute of this book.’

‘The history never overwhelms the story, and there was never a dull moment as the story built toward a satisfying conclusion.’

‘Terrific read. Very interesting and suspenseful.’