Thursday, 28 March 2019

AUTHOR FAVOURITES: REBEL RUN by JACK GILES


Ray Foster, who writes westerns as JACK GILES, tells me a favourite of his own novels is REBEL RUN.

This is more an ‘eastern’ than a western, as the location is the ‘Island,’ a POW camp in the eastern states where Confederate Prisoners are held during the American Civil War. This is Ray delving into POW escape territory, not surprising given two of his favourite books are Pat Reid's 'The Colditz Story' and Charles McCormac's 'You'll Die In Singapore.'

In REBEL RUN Confederate artilleryman Van Essen masterminds the escape, which involves a death-defying race down river rapids; but this is only the beginning of the dangers the escapees will face as they attempt to break through the enemy lines and rejoin the Confederate Army.

Ray is rightly proud of the research that went into the novel, conducted prior to the age of Google. Some Civil War POW camps acquired a grim reputation for inhuman conditions. During a period of 14 months, 28% of the Union prisoners held at Camp Sumter, near Andersonville, Georgia died.


The infamous Andersonville Prison Camp

At Camp Douglas in Chicago, 10% of its Confederate prisoners died during one cold winter month;


Confederate prisoners at Camp Douglas

and the death rate of 25% at Elmira Prison in New York State very nearly equalled that of Andersonville.

In total about 56,000 soldiers died in prisons during the war, accounting for almost 10% of all Civil War fatalities.

Various movies have been set or part-set in Civil War prison camps: MAJOR DUNDEE,


BEN JOHNSON, RICHARD HARRIS and WARREN OATES in Major Dundee (1965)

TWO FLAGS WEST


JOSEPH COTTEN and ARTHUR HUNNICUTT in ‘Two Flags West’ (1950)

and a particular favourite of mine - THE RAID (1954.)


VAN HEFLIN, PETER GRAVES and LEE MARVIN in ‘The Raid’ (1954)

Not forgetting MYSTERIOUS ISLAND!


Mysterious Island (1961)


Reviews of REBEL RUN:

‘A brilliantly told and well-researched story that kept me hooked to the last page.'

‘…Great, a prison break story and a chase. Action packed, with really good interesting characters.'

and

Thursday, 14 March 2019

AUTHOR FAVOURITES: VAMPIRE SIEGE AT RIO MUERTO by JOHN WHALEN


Alongside film reviewing John Whalen (writing as John M. Whalen) is the author of ‘hybrid’ novels where the western meets the future, or the cowboy hero is just as likely to encounter vampires or monsters as regular bad guys.

One of his favourites of his own novels is VAMPIRE SIEGE AT RIO MUERTO.

John tells me bounty hunter Mordecai Slate is modelled on the characters LEE VAN CLEEF played in movies like FOR A FEW DOLLARS MORE. Except, as Mordecai states: ‘Hunting monsters is my business.’


A New Mexican ranchero hires Slate to track down the vampire who ravished his daughter. Don Pedro Sanchez wants Kord Manion brought back alive, so he can drive in the stake himself.

Slate captures his prey and comes up with an unusual way to transport him back to Sanchez. Kord’s brother, Dax, and his gang of vampire outlaws pursue. During the chase, Slate rescues a girl and has to get her out of harm’s way.

The climax in a desert ghost town, Rio Muerto, is like THE WILD BUNCH with the addition of vampires!


WILLIAM HOLDEN in ‘The Wild Bunch’ (1969)

Vampires turn up out west as early as 1959 in CURSE OF THE UNDEAD.



‘Curse of the Undead’ (1959)

The Gorch Brothers of ‘Wild Bunch’ fame re-surface as vampires on TV in the ‘BUFFY THE VAMPIRE SLAYER’ episode ‘Bad Eggs.’




A ghost town shoot-out reminded me of western movies YELLOW SKY (1948)




and THE LAW AND JAKE WADE (1958)


RICHARD WIDMARK in ‘The Law and Jake Wade

And aliens (spiders this time) also assault a ghost town in the classic ‘OUTER LIMITS’ episode ‘The Zanti Misfits.’





Reviews of RIO MUERTO:

‘As weird westerns go, this one is an instant classic…. If you're a fan of spaghetti westerns or Hammer horror films, this book is for you.’
‘A dandy yarn, a Western-horror mashup that could shoulder up to Stephen King and Louis L’Amour with equal comfort, and yet maintain stature as a creature all its own… Whalen doesn’t drop the reins of either genre: There are gunfights and fangs, wagons and coffins, townfolk and bloody necks, and one fast-paced tale that doesn’t turn in directions the reader might expect.’
‘A rip-roaring tale to be sure and - as usual - something more. …the author achieves yet a new pinnacle of genre-bending suspense…his cagey knack for fleshing out characters that may at first seem cliche is especially notable…. the novel rolls out like a particularly gripping film.'
Find it here:

Thursday, 7 March 2019

AUTHOR FAVOURITES: LINE OF GLORY by THOMAS CLAGETT


Award-winning author Thomas Clagett tells me his favourite of his own novels is LINE OF GLORY.


Here’s my 4 star review of LINE OF GLORY, which I put on Amazon.co.uk and Goodreads:

Author’s audacious approach gives us a fresh take on the Alamo

Almost as soon as the smoke cleared from the Alamo battlefield another fog shrouded the scene – that of legend.



The ruins of The Alamo in 1844

In the nearly two centuries since historians have argued over almost every single aspect of what may have occurred there in early 1836, when fabled heroes – Davy Crockett, Jim Bowie and William Travis – and a handful of Texans gathered to stand against Santa Anna’s mighty Mexican army and a 13-day siege ensued.


President-General ANTONIO LOPEZ de SANTA ANNA

Numerous novels, TV shows and movies on these extraordinary events have, for the most part, only fuelled the confusion and controversy. So I was sceptical that any further re-telling could add anything new.



DAVID (DAVY) CROCKETT in 1834

Happily I was wrong. Thomas Clagett’s audacious approach brings a fresh twist to the tale.

For a start he doesn’t attempt to tell the story of the Texas War of Independence, or even the whole siege. Instead he concentrates on the last 13 hours – the evening of March 5 and the morning of March 6 1836.



JAMES BOWIE

We get an intense focus on the ‘lull before the storm’ and then on the storm itself, as the Mexican army launches its final bloody assault on the Alamo. And bravely he chooses to tell the story through the eyes of less-famous participants: Susannah Dickinson, wife of an Alamo defender, three brothers among the garrison and a Mexican officer leading his troops against them. The ‘big three’ – Crockett, Bowie and Travis – become supporting players. In this way, Clagett humanises the story, without in any way trivialising or diminishing it, or belittling the participants (on both sides.)



WILLIAM TRAVIS in 1835

This is still an epic of courage and sacrifice, of heroism without false heroics. Clagett expertly captures the tension of men waiting to face death, and then the high drama of them giving and receiving it in the battle that consumes them. Highly recommended.  


SUSANNAH DICKINSON

Other reviews of LINE OF GLORY:

‘Gripping… Rousing and memorable.’

‘Excellent. Superb. Spellbinding.’

‘Vivid and authentic.’



Robert Onderdonk’s ‘Fall of the Alamo’ 1903

Find my reviews here: (Amazon.co.uk) 
(Goodreads)

You can also find LINE OF GLORY here: