Archie Joscelyn’s writing career lasted for more than fifty years, starting in the pulps in 1921 and continuing until the late Seventies. He wrote hundreds of stories, mostly for the Western pulps, but he’s best remembered for the Western novels (at least two hundred of them) he wrote under his name and the pseudonyms Al Cody, Lynn Westland, and Tex Holt.
I’ve read a number of Joscelyn’s novels and have found him to be a consistently
entertaining author of traditional Westerns, with his books ranging from good
to excellent, other than the novels from very late in his career, which are not
good. Recently, I read his Lynn Westland novel LEGION OF THE LAWLESS, published
by Harlequin in 1953, back when Harlequin published other genres besides
romances. That’s my copy in the scan.
This novel takes place soon after the Civil War and concerns the Army’s effort
to control the bands of former guerrillas who have turned outlaw and are
preying on the cattle drives that have started up the trails from Texas to the
railhead in Missouri. Captain Phil Lansing is in command of the cavalrymen sent
to track down the mysterious leader of the renegades known as Texas Red.
Lansing and his men encounter a cattle drive up from the San Saba country in
Texas, being led by a beautiful young woman named Joan Ellis. Lansing falls for
her, of course, never realizing that her brother is actually the infamous Texas
Red, who has promised the herd safe passage through the region controlled by
the renegades.
With some writers, that would be enough plot for a book right there, but Joscelyn
often has some oddball twist in his tales, and that’s true here. Stalwart
cavalry officer Phil Lansing is the nominal protagonist of the book, but it’s
none other than Texas Red Ellis, the notorious outlaw his own self, who turns
out to be the hero. Like an owlhoot GAME OF THRONES, there are others vying for
power among the renegades, plus the threat of Indians, so Joscelyn has plenty
going on as the action stampedes toward an epic showdown in an Indian burial
ground. (Yes, there is an actual stampede. Of course there is.)
LEGION OF THE LAWLESS isn’t in the top rank of the Joscelyn books I’ve read
(DOOMROCK and THE THUNDERING HILLS are the best I’ve encountered so far), but
it’s a good solid traditional Western with just enough interesting angles to
set it apart. Joscelyn is one of those writers whose prose can range from
slightly awkward to vivid and poetic, sometimes on the same page. If he’d been
a little more consistent in his writing, I think he would be better remembered
than he is. I enjoyed this book and I’m glad I have probably two dozen more of
Archie Joscelyn’s novels on my shelves. If you’re a fan of traditional
Westerns, he’s worth reading.
2 comments:
Thanks, Mr. Reasoner. Will look for them.
THE THUNDERING HILLS is one of two books featuring Powder Burns, a most likeable character. (The other is - yes, you guessed it - POWDER BURNS). I do enjoy his work, even though it's a little dated. He certainly could spin a warn. We're publishing his POWDER BURNS and MONTANA ABBOTT series in ebook at Piccadilly Publishing.
Post a Comment