There’s a lot of hostility and intrigue among this organization, however, and
Hogarth’s ruthless cunning soon makes him some deadly enemies. A mysterious
rustler is also preying on the ranches in the area, adding a new threat that
Hogarth has to deal with, all while trying to outsmart the other ranchers,
court the beautiful redhead, and survive numerous ambushes, fistfights, and
shootouts.
GUN-WITCH FROM WYOMING is a short novel by Les Savage Jr. that appeared
originally in the November 1947 issue of LARIAT STORY MAGAZINE. There’s an
ebook version available from Wildside Press, and that’s the one I read. Although
Les Savage Jr. sold to a variety of Western pulps, including WESTERN STORY,
DIME WESTERN, and STAR WESTERN, during a career that lasted only a dozen years
before diabetes claimed his life at the early age of 35, he was really a star
at Fiction House. His stories appeared regularly, usually featured on the
covers, in LARIAT STORY MAGAZINE, ACTION STORIES, FRONTIER STORIES, and NORTH-WEST
ROMANCES. He was just about the perfect Fiction House author, since his stories
featured plenty of fast-moving, hardboiled action and usually more than one
sexy female character. There are two beautiful women in GUN-WITCH FROM WYOMING,
and I won’t give away which one winds up being the title character.
Savage packs a lot of plot into this one, which I estimate runs about 25,000
words. Almost too much plot, as there are numerous characters, all with their own
shadowy motivations. Also, for much of the story, Bob Hogarth isn’t a very
likable protagonist. Despite all that, Savage makes it work and had me flipping
the digital pages to find out what was going to happen. I wound up enjoying
this book quite a bit. If you’re a traditional Western fan, it’s well worth
reading, and if you haven’t read Les Savage Jr. before, it’s pretty representative
of his work. Give it a try, and if you like it, there are plenty more of his
books still in print.
Braddock’s Gold
6 hours ago
2 comments:
Mr. R... Am I too late to comment that this entire magazine is available as a free pdf download on The Luminist website. http://www.luminist.org/archives/PU/ . Scroll down the alphabetical PULP FICTION MAG list to LARIOT.
My sister lives in Wyoming, so I will read this 52-page story (interrupted by ads) and send her the .pdf too.
I've started reading your Shayne stories now... bought "Yesterday's Angel," Sept 1980.
Trevor, it's never too late to point out something like that. Thanks for the heads-up! I sometimes look to see if the pulps I'm writing about are available on-line so I can include a link, but often I forget.
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