Showing posts with label ralph compton. Show all posts
Showing posts with label ralph compton. Show all posts

Skeleton Lode (Sundown Riders, #6) Review

Skeleton Lode (Sundown Riders, #6)
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I bought this book for my dad to read and he brought it back to me and I read it and I had to apologize - this is, without a doubt, the worst Western I have ever read.
What makes it so bad?
When I read a Western, I expect a certain amount of realism. I am not talking about the picky, picky details like the amount of gunpowder grains in a bullet. These are the things I am talking about:
-The book is set in 1857. They constantly refer to the sheriff of Gila County. There was no Gila County in 1857 - it was not formed until the year 1881.
-They refer to the town of Globe. It was a mining town formed in 1878 (as Globe City).
-Uncle Henry (Hoss) has a cabin on Saguaro Lake. Saguaro Lake was not formed until a hydroelectric dam was installed in 1930.
-Characters camp along creekbeds in the mountains during massive thunderstorms. I am not a mountain climber but I do know that you avoid creekbeds due to flash floods.
-The Spanglish (English/Spanish combination used by the Spanish-speaking characters speaking broken English) is pathetic. The Spanish thrown in reads like the individual words were looked up in a pocket dictionary (no one at the publishing house knows a single person that speaks Spanish?). No verb conjugation. Incorrect adjective placement and usage, use of the English "apostrophe s". Plus, I can understand the need for Spanglish when the Mexican characters are speaking English, but why wouldn't they speak to one another in regular Spanish - and Compton could skip the Spanglish all together for those parts?
-The worst feature of the book is its total disregard for time and distance when riding on horseback. The sheriff in Phoenix is constantly popping over to Tortilla Flats. An internet map search tells me that it is more than an hour by car. That would be a long trip on a horse in the desert. But, that's okay, Bowdre, one of the bad guys, takes a 35 mile mule trip one afternoon on his way back from a 12 mile morning walk to the store. Dallas and Arlo (the good guys) are forever traveling around the Superstition Mountains - from one side to the other with no problem and quite quickly, despite the fact that these mountains cover approximately 250 square miles. All of these distances would be believable if the book was set in 1957 and everyone had Jeeps, but with horses? Laughable.
Throw in the repetitive nature of the book and you can why I had to apologize. The main "good guy and girl" characters only have four conversations (1) We loved Uncle Hoss, wasn't he great - too bad he's dead; 2) We love each other and we fully intend to get physical in our relationship, but not quite yet; 3) We hate Gary Davis (the bad guy); 4) Is the gold worth all of this? They have these converstation over and over and over and over.
The bad guys just fight and argue and then one of them shoots another - that is unless their horses and food get stolen (it happens over and over) and they make a 12 mile march to town (in the desert!) and ride back in the same day. Oh - and twice they get stuck in lightning storms that blast dozens of lightning bolts all around them.
Where did everyone get the cash to buy horse after horse and supplies to feed a whole camp full of men? They literally bought every horse and mule in the area for this fiasco.
Please, read anything else by Louis L'amour or Elmer Kelton.

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Arlo Wells and Dallas Holt are two ex-cowpunchers who've hit a patch of bad luck--until a dying friend tells them of a lost gold mine. They jump at the chance to get the fortune. But Arlo and Dallas aren't the only ones who know about the mine--and their streak of bad luck is about to turn into a fight for survival..."If you likeLouis L' Amour you'll love Ralph Compton."--Quanah Tribune Chief Praise for the Sundown Riders:"Thrilling."--Huntsville Times* The Sundown Riders series includes:Devil's Canyon (5/98) & Whiskey River (1/99) * Also by Ralph Compton: The Tremayne series, including-- Train To Durango (9/98), Six Guns And Double Eagles (1/98), Border Empire (7/97)

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Devil's Canyon (Sundown Riders) Review

Devil's Canyon (Sundown Riders)
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Not the best Compton I have ever read, but his Trail Drive series books I highly recommend.

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The Sundown Riders gallop into thier fourth adventure, Devil's Canyon, which finds the four mercenaries on a mission delivering dynamite through the desert to a Utah Gold Mine. But a treacherous undercover outlaw within thier ranks will make their journey that much more dangerous...

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Demon's Pass (Sundown Riders, No.7) Review

Demon's Pass (Sundown Riders, No.7)
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I arbitrarily picked this book from a library shelf. It was refreshingly different, and it was reminiscent of L''Amour.Compton keeps your interest up throughout. His stories are varied and interesting. Lastly I like the use he makes of the historical background. Thus far I have purchased and read eighteen of his novels. They are not predictable, even though the themes sometimes parallel. Good western author!

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The first book of a brand-new Western trilogy, Ralph Compton's Demon's Pass begins with the brutal attack of a family at the hands of the Cheyenne. His sister kidnapped and loved ones slaughtered, young Parker Stanley has nowhere to turn. But a smooth-talking entrepreneur may be his salvation-if they can make it to Utah in one piece....

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Across the Rio Colorado (Sundown Riders (St. Martins)) Review

Across the Rio Colorado (Sundown Riders (St. Martins))
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The people from Missouri hope to go to Texas which they think is a land of freedom and the fullfilment of their dreams. But first they have to conquer the many hazards including, ragging rivers, indians, violent thunderstorms, etc. But Mr. Compton finds a way. a great read.

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Across rivers of blood and plains of tears, he led a wagon train toward a country fighting to be born. . .Miners dug for fortunes. Soldiers died on open plains. And a few brave men drove the wooden freight wagons into the wild land. Now, master Western novelist Ralph Compton tells the real story of the tough-as-leather men who first blazed the way into the untamed frontier.Texas! For the pioneers who streamed out of Missouri it was a land of dreams and freedom. Veteran wagon boss Chance McQuade, a man deadly with a pistol and Sharps, had signed on to take a hundred families there. But the man who hired McQuade was joining the wagon train, and turning it into a brawling, rolling city of sin and violence. Now, on the hard drive West, McQuade faces Kiowa, lightening storms, and killers behind his back-all to reach a promised land that's erupting into war.

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The Old Spanish Trail (Trail Drive) Review

The Old Spanish Trail (Trail Drive)
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Rand Hayes and his men had sold 5000 head of prime Texas beef to a man in Santa Fe. But they find out he has been murdered. Now they must try to get rid of them. Some states have banned Texas beef. So this leaves Los Aneles as their choice. To do so they must cross 2 mountain ranges and the deadly Mohave Desert.

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