WOLF BRAND is a short novel by L.P. Holmes that first appeared in the August 1942 issue of ACTION STORIES (with a cover by Norman Saunders) and was reprinted in the hardback duo DOOM PATROL, which is where I read it. I’ve mentioned numerous times that Holmes is one of my favorite Western authors, and as expected, he didn’t let me down with this one.
As usual with one of his stories, the plot is traditional: The railroad has
come to a valley that’s shared uneasily by cattlemen and homesteaders, and when
the evil railroad manager tries to swindle the settlers out of their land, it
sets up a clash between different factions of cattlemen, one led by Henry
Marsten, who hates the homesteaders and wants them out of the valley, even if
means siding with the shady railroad deal, and our Stalwart Hero Vike Gunnison,
to whom fair play is more important than whether you raise cows or crops. So we
have cattlemen vs. homesteaders, cattlemen vs. cattlemen, and an evil railroad
boss trying to take advantage of the situation who brings in a hired gunman and
his gang of killers. Shootouts, raids, and the sort of brutal fistfight
that turns up in a lot of Holmes’ yarns ensue. Oh, and two beautiful young women for
Gunnison to choose between. There’s a late twist that’s not really unexpected,
but it works very well.
I had a wonderful time reading this one. Holmes may not have pushed the
boundaries of the genre, but he did a great job of working within them. WOLF
BRAND is packed with incident and well-developed characters. Vike Gunnison is a likable but pretty standard hero, but the women in his life are complex enough that
the romantic triangle aspect of this book is particularly effective. Not all
the characters turn out to be as good or bad as you might expect, either. And
the action scenes are great, including that fistfight and some epic gun
battles.
If you’re a fan of traditional Westerns, I can’t recommend the work of L.P.
Holmes highly enough. WOLF BRAND is a top-notch yarn, one of the best I’ve read
by him so far.
2 comments:
I think I've read Holmes's work in other fields over the years. Perhaps it was western fiction, though. This does sound good.
Even by the ztandardz of prolific pulpzterz, a busy guy:
http://www.philsp.com/homeville/fmi/n03/n03617.htm#A195
Weird spelling due to my problematic laptop keyboard, hoping to force spell-correct to do its job, since I couldn't type "S"es suddenly (again). But only "busy" was fixed.
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