In the summer of 1871, a reluctant sheriff accompanies a young Kansas farmer into the remote Comancheria to help him find his child taken captive by Comanche.
I read this book after reading the author's other book - The Transylvania Detective Squad. I only read this Western because I loved his other book so much, but I really enjoyed this too, even though I usually would not read a Western.
I'm not much for Westerns, but I loved this one. I have never seen so many top-notch things said by characters in a book. I loved this enough that I bought my brother a copy and sent him it because he lives in Arizona and loves Westerns. He got back to me and said the loved it too and that if I had not sent him it, he proably would never have known about this book.
Sheriff Ford is such a tormented soul, but overalll he's just so content in life also. Nothing really gets to him and that's the mark of a man who has learned from his mistakes. He's just so damn clever in his remarks too. I pray a sequel to this novel comes out soon. I don't know who you are M L Dunn, but please right a sequel to this stroy with July Ford as the main character.
This reminds me somewhat of Elmore Leonard's Westerns. The beauty is in the simplicity. Mr. Dunn is parsimonious but not lacking in engaging detail. The Plains are there before the reader, reachable, with their big open lines and complex characters. Well Done.
THE most boring book. It takes forever to finally get to the end and it too is boring. Tells you none of the things that could have been interesting to the story. Boring.