Thursday 28 February 2019

AUTHOR FAVOURITES: SHADOW SOLDIER by C. K. CRIGGER


Carol Crigger writes westerns, mysteries and sci-fi/fantasy novels. She’s a 2-time Spur Award finalist, and winner of the EPIC Award in the Western/Historical category.

She tells me a favourite of her own novels is SHADOW SOLDIER, (credited to C.K. Crigger) 2nd in her GUNSMITH TIME-TRAVEL series. Gunsmith BOOTHENAY IRONS has the power to travel back in time and experience the history held within an antique gun. But the 1911 Colt .45 Automatic she acquires has a mysterious power of its own.


It’s Boothenay's fiancé, Caleb, who’s accidentally transported back to World War I. Boothenay must travel back in time to rescue him, on the way encountering a mysterious old man whose power is equal to her own.


According to Wikipedia time travel features in ancient Hindu, Buddhist and Jewish mythology. In Hindu mythology, 'The Mahabharata' mentions King Raivata Kakudmi transported far into the future. The Japanese tale of ‘Urashima Taro,’ dating from 720 A.D. tells of a young fisherman who visits an undersea palace. After three days, he returns home to his village and finds himself 300 years in the future, where he has been forgotten, his house is in ruins, and his family has died.
A contender for the earliest time travel science fiction story is ‘Memoirs of the Twentieth Century’ (1733) by SAMUEL MADDEN where British ambassadors in 1997 and 1998 correspond with diplomats of the then-present day, conveying the political and religious conditions presumed to exist in the future.
Sleep transports characters through time in ‘Rip Van Winkle’ by WASHINGTON IRVING (1819) and A Connecticut Yankee at King Arthur’s Court’ by MARK TWAIN (1889.)
One of the first stories to feature time travel by means of a machine is ‘The Clock that Went Backwards’ by EDWARD PAGE MITCHELL, which appeared in the ‘New York Sun’ in 1881. An unusual clock, when wound, runs backwards and transports people nearby back in time. H. G. WELLS’s ‘The Time Machine’ (1895) popularized the concept of time travel by mechanical means.
Time travel has featured in too many movies to list, from A CONNECTICUT YANKEE AT KING ARTHUR’S COURT (a musical based on the Mark Twain novel) to several versions of THE TIME MACHINE to THE TERMINATOR. Not to mention the BACK TO THE FUTURE series, PLANET OF THE APES etc…


ROD TAYLOR in ‘The Time Machine’ (1960)

I’m a big fan of 60s TV which produced at least three time-travel gems I’m aware of, two from STAR TREK:
The City on the Edge of Forever’ (often voted the best ever episode)


JOAN COLLINS and WILLIAM SHATNER in The City on the Edge of Forever

and – Carol might appreciate this, given the gun-theme of SHADOW SOLDIER – ‘Spectre of the Gun’ where the crew of 'The Enterprise' find themselves caught in the middle of the Gunfight at the OK Corral;


and the brilliant OUTER LIMITS episode ‘The Man who was Never Born’ from 1963.


SHIRLEY KIGHT and MARTIN LANDAU in ‘The Man who was Never Born

1963 also saw the launch of the British TV series DR WHO, featuring a time-travelling doctor, which is still running today.


WILLIAM HARTNELL as the first DR. WHO


Reviews of SHADOW SOLDIER:
‘C. K. Crigger's second story about Boothenay Irons, time tripping gunsmith extraordinaire, is just as exciting as the first. This book defies categorization. Fantasy? Yes. Romance? Yes. Historical novel? Yes. Action novel? Yes. Damned good read? You betcha. Will I be reading more C. K. Crigger stories? Absolutely!’

‘I would recommend this author to anyone.’


2 comments:

  1. As I'm sure everyone knows, 2018 was the hundred year anniversary of WWI. A lot of "stuff" got printed about the course of the war in historical columns in the newspapers and such. It's been a good many years since Shadow Soldier was published, and I find myself as fascinated by "the Great War" as when I first wrote the story.

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    1. It's a fact that WW1, one of the most tragic events in human history, spawned many outstanding books, poems and films etc. An extreme case of good things coming out of something (very) bad. Thanks for stopping by, Carol, and I hope you enjoyed the blog.

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