I was reading quite a few pulps earlier this year, but I got covered up with other things and sidetracked from them for a while. I plan to read more of them between now and the end of the year, and the September 1951 issue of THE RIO KID WESTERN is a good place to start. That’s my battered, stained, spine-rolled copy in the scan. I’ll put a better scan from the Fictionmags Index at the bottom of the post, but I like to show you the actual copy I read whenever I can. I’m pretty sure the cover art is by George Rozen.
The Rio Kid has long been one of my favorite Western pulp series. For those of
you unfamiliar with the character, the Rio Kid is Bob Pryor, a stalwart young
Texan from the border country (hence his nickname). Pryor fought for the Union
during the Civil War and rose to the rank of captain as a cavalry officer
serving under General George Armstrong Custer. Returning to Texas after the
war, he found that his parents have been killed by bandits. After avenging
them, he sets off on a life of drifting and adventuring, accompanied by a
sidekick he picks up in the course of the first novel, the dashing young
Mexican Celestino Mireles. The gimmick of the series is that Pryor and
Celestino always find themselves involved with historical characters and
settings in adventures that, if they didn’t happen, could have—and should have.
The series was created by veteran pulpster Tom Curry, written by Curry and
numerous others, and ran for 76 issues from December 1939 to May 1953. Quite a
few of the novels were reprinted in paperback during the Sixties and Seventies
by Popular Library and Curtis Books.
The Rio Kid novel in this particular issue was written by D.B. Newton, who
authored a few of these pulp character novels but is better remembered for his
non-series Western pulp stories and a long career turning out hardback and
paperback Western novels under his own name and the pseudonyms Dwight Bennett
and Clement Hardin. He was a fine writer, a little more thoughtful and restrained
than some of the pulpsters, but he could still bring the fast-paced action when
he needed to. His last work was creating the Western series STAGECOACH STATION,
packaged by Book Creations Inc. and published by Bantam under the house-name
Hank Mitchum, and writing a number of the early novels in that series. As one
of the various Hank Mitchums myself, I’ve always been pleased that I got to
work on a series created by D.B. Newton.
But to get to “Scorpions of Silverado” at last, it’s set in the silver mining
boomtown of Leadville, Colorado. Bob Pryor and Celestino Mireles are sent for
by Dave Cook, the real-life founder of the Rocky Mountain Detective Agency, who
has been hired to uncover the leader of a criminal gang wreaking havoc in the
town. Pryor and Celestino do so, of course (the mastermind’s identity is no
secret to the reader, having been revealed early on), but not before some
shootouts, fistfights, a battle in an abandoned mine, and an attempted
lynching. H.A.W. Tabor, Leadville’s leading citizen, is another historical
figure who plays an important part in the story, although the bad guys are all
fictional. It’s fast-moving fun, pretty lightweight but very entertaining.
Also, while some modern readers might be offended by Celestino’s thick accent
and his sidekick status, he’s really the dominant figure in this novel, doing
most of the detective work and figuring out what’s really going on. I’ve always
liked Celestino. He’s much more than the comedy relief some might take him for.
Next up is “Snake Charmer”, a short story by Robert J. Hogan. Best remembered
for the G-8 series and other air war yarns, Hogan wrote a lot of Westerns, too,
and was good at them. This story about a mining company payroll robbery and an
old-timer who used to travel with a carnival is an entertaining story with some
nice twists.
Clay Randall, author of the novelette “Make a Bigger Boot Hill” in this issue,
was really Clifton Adams, one of the best of the hardboiled Western writers of
the Forties, Fifties, and Sixties. This tale about a Texas Ranger pursuing the
outlaws responsible for his wife’s death and catching up to them in a squalid
bordertown is one of the few misfires by him that I’ve read. The writing is
good and the characters are interesting, but the plot is pretty thin and
somehow the story just never really engaged me.
The novelette “Kill-Crazy Trail” is by Reeve Walker, a Thrilling Group house
name known to have been used by Walker A. Tompkins, Tom Curry, Charles N.
Heckelmann, and Chuck Martin. Other authors probably used it as well. Having
read the story under that name in this issue, I don’t know who wrote it, but I’m
fairly confident it wasn’t any of the authors previously associated with the
name unless possibly Heckelmann. It doesn’t read at all like the work of
Tompkins, Curry, or Martin. However, this tale of a young rancher forced by
circumstances and his own bad judgment to turn outlaw is a good one. Despite
the bloodthirsty title, it’s actually a rather mild, heartwarming yarn with
good characterization. I liked it quite a bit.
The issue wraps up with “Old Pete”, a short story by one of my favorite Western
authors, A. Leslie Scott, writing here under his A. Leslie pseudonym. The title
character is a roadrunner who plays a vital part in the showdown between a young
lawman and a gang of bank robbers. The story doesn’t have much of the flowery
description that’s a hallmark of Scott’s prose, but it does have some nice action
and humor. He could spin a yarn, that’s for sure.
Overall, this is a solid issue of THE RIO KID WESTERN. None of the stories are
great, but they’re all good. The Clifton Adams story is the weakest of the
bunch (there’s a sentence I’ve never written before and possibly never will
again), and it’s certainly not terrible, just not quite to my taste. Other
readers might like it the best because Adams has a really nice hardboiled
style. If you have this issue on your shelves, it’s well worth reading.
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