This is a pulp that I own and read recently. I think the cover is by A. Leslie Ross. The hat and the face look like Ross’s work to me, but maybe someone who is better than I am at artist identification can pin this down for us.
The lead novella in this issue is “Gun-Hung Range” by W. Edmunds Claussen. In a
12-year career from the mid-Forties to the late Fifties, Claussen produced
around 80 stories for the Western pulps. Most of his output appeared in various
Columbia Publications pulps, such as this issue of REAL WESTERN STORIES. But he
also sold to some of the other publishers and authored half a dozen Western
novels for Lion Books, Avon, Pocket Books, and Dodd, Mead, plus several volumes
of historical non-fiction. I don’t recall reading anything by him before this
novella, which uses the old plot of a villain trying to force out some small
ranchers and grab their land because the railroad is coming through. The
protagonist is a fairly interesting character, a rancher who is emotionally
tortured because he’s married to a saloon floozy with whom he has a son but is
actually in love with a beautiful schoolteacher. Unfortunately, the writing
isn’t very good, with clunky prose that sometimes doesn’t flow very well and is
hard to follow. The big battle at the end isn’t bad but doesn’t fully redeem
the story. I have a couple of Claussen’s novels on my shelves, but I’m not
going to be in any hurry to read them.
M.G. Baker published a dozen stories in various Columbia Western pulps in the
late Forties and early Fifties. I suspect that the name might be a pseudonym or
house name, but that’s all it is, a suspicion. Baker’s story in this issue, a
novelette called “A Target For His Coffin”, is a first-person yarn, somewhat
unusual for the Western pulps, narrated by the sheriff of a mining town who has
24 hours to uncover the identity of a killer and save a young visitor from the
east from being lynched. It’s an okay story, a little predictable but
reasonably entertaining.
T.W. Ford was a very prolific pulpster, turning out hundreds of Western,
sports, and detective tales, as well as being an editor and writing a few
novels, sometimes under the pseudonym Weston Clay. He has a novelette called
“Boothill Brand” in this issue, and it’s a good hardboiled Western yarn in
which an outlaw answers a call for help from an old flame and returns to the
town where he was betrayed and framed for rustling. Plenty of action, the
writing is decent (Ford was never much of a stylist), and I enjoyed this one
quite a bit, not surprising since Ford was pretty consistent in his work.
Allan K. Echols is another very prolific Western pulp author/novelist. His
story “Renegades Die Twice” is another pretty hardboiled yarn about the meeting
between an old outlaw who’s dying and wants to make amends for his crimes and a
younger owlhoot who has a clever plan. As usual in this type of story, things
don’t work out as either man plans. You can see the twist coming, but it’s
still effective and makes this a good story.
C.H. Cogswell authored several dozen stories during the Fifties, all appearing
in Columbia Western pulps. His story in this issue, “Just One More Raid!”, is a
well-written, poignant tale about an honest rancher and his best friend, an
outlaw who wants to go straight and settle down, but before he does, he has to
pull one more job . . . You know this story isn’t going to end well, but Cogswell
does a good job with it.
Lon Williams is best remembered for his long-running series of supernaturally
tinged tales about Deputy Sheriff Lee Winters, but he wrote quite a few
stand-alone Western stories, too, including “Poady Hangs a Multitude” in this
issue. It’s about a meek little hombre who’s elected sheriff as a joke, but he
comes up with a bizarre way to bring law and order to a wide-open mining camp.
This one maybe stretches credibility a bit too far. It’s an interesting story
but not a particularly good one.
“Gun Mission” by W.F. Day is about a young man who teaches himself to be a fast
gun in order to get revenge on a man who humiliated him. But when he returns to
his hometown to accomplish this, he finds himself mixed up in something more complicated
and has to change his plans. Lots of action in this one, and it’s pretty
well-written. Day published only a handful of stories and I don’t know anything
about him, but based on this yarn, he was a decent writer.
The issue wraps up with “Boothill Medico” by Brett Austin, a pseudonym for Lee
Floren. This is a short-short about a doctor having to operate on a patient he
has a grudge against. The writing is decent, but it seemed to lacking a final
twist it should have had.
Overall I’d say this is a below-average issue of a Western pulp with a few good
stories but nothing outstanding, and some mediocre but not terrible stories. I
don’t consider the time spent reading it wasted, but it’s probably the weakest
issue of a Robert Lowndes-edited pulp that I’ve read so far, proving that he couldn’t
always work miracles on an almost non-existent budget.
2 comments:
I was born in August 1950, so depending on how long it stayed on the newsstands, this issue may have still been on the racks when I arrived in the world. Robert Lowndes rejected a lousy story that I submitted to Magazine of Horror in 1968 or so, certainly good editorial judgment on his part.
The cover date was usually the off-sale date, so it would all depend on how diligent the newsstand guy was about pulling the older issues.
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