
Clifton Adams had a short but solid career in the Western
pulps, lasting about five years in the late Forties and early Fifties. I assume
the reason he stopped writing short fiction is that he became a successful
paperback novelist and eventually moved on to more success and Spur awards as a
regular author for Doubleday’s Double D Western hardcover line. He was also
well-regarded as a hardboiled crime novelist, although not nearly as prolific
in that genre.
GAMBLING MAN is one of his early novels, published by Gold Medal in 1955 and
never reprinted, as far as I know. Despite the title and the cover, this is
actually a coming-of-age novel, and a really superb one, at that.
Twelve-year-old Jefferson Blaine lives in the small Texas town of Plainsville,
which lives up to its name as far as Jeff is concerned. Once a cattle town, it’s
now mostly a supply center for farmers and a pretty boring place. Jeff lives with
his aunt and uncle because his mother died giving birth to him and his father
left right after he was born.
Then one day Nathan Blaine comes back to town to see his son, and Jeff is
surprised to discover his father is a gunman, a gambler, and quite possibly an
outlaw. His aunt and uncle don’t like Nate and don’t want Jeff to have
anything to do with him, but of course that’s not the way things play out. Then
the situation takes yet another turn, and a tragic one, when the local bank is
robbed and Nathan Blaine goes on the run again.
This takes up the first half of the book, and it’s absolutely compelling
reading, rich in characterization and very well written. Halfway through the
book there’s a time jump of five years, to the point when Jeff Blaine is nearly
grown and getting a bad reputation himself, just like his father. Then more
outlaws show up in town, which has gotten wild again since the railroad
arrived, and bring unwelcome news of Jeff’s father, news that threatens to make
him finally cross the line and become a real owlhoot himself.
The second half of GAMBLING MAN doesn’t quite live up to the first half, but it’s
still very, very good and builds to an exciting, emotional climax. Adams’
writing is hardboiled and top-notch all the way. This is a very solid
traditional Western and gets a high recommendation from me.