Thursday, October 22, 2009
DEATH GROUND NOW AVAILABLE
NOW AVAILABLE
From Publishers Weekly
This is a western for grown-ups, written in a lean, hardboiled style that should appeal to readers who "don't read westerns." In the waning years of the frontier, in an unnamed territory, bounty-hunter Guild celebrates a joyless 54th birthday in a brothel. Guild is acting as bodyguard for Merle Rig, a very unpleasant man who is soon murdered, along with a teenager whom Guild had reluctantly hired as an assistant. Suspicion points to Kriker, a notoriously violent mountain man, bank robber and leader of a secluded settlement of former low-lifes. The laconic Guild, carrying his own personal guilt about a dead child, sets out to bring Kriker to justice, accompanied by the nasty Bruckner brothers, sheriff's deputies. Kriker, meanwhile, is nursing his adoptive daughter, using a "granny woman's" folk medicine that is useless against what turns out to be cholera. Gorman ( Guild and the Jack Dwyer mysteries) uses the period setting effectively and draws his characters with a deft hand.
Copyright 1988 Reed Business Information, Inc
From Somebody Dies
Death Ground by Ed Gorman (Leo Guild Western)
This review originally appeared in somewhat different form on Ex Libris Reviews. Copyright 2005. Reprinted with permission.
Ed Gorman writes my favorite kind of Western, at least as far as I can tell from the example of Death Ground. I really enjoy dark fiction like horror and hard-boiled crime novels. There, characters unrepentantly operate by their own set of rules. This was the first Western I read that didn't appear to be peopled entirely with black-and-white characters either trying to do the right thing or blatantly the opposite.
Everyone's motives in Death Ground are questionable. Even the protagonist is a bounty hunter named Leo Guild who is more interested in collecting the reward for returning the spoils of a bank robbery than in bringing the robber to justice — although that would be okay, too, as long as the reward was worth it.
Gorman puts enough plot into the 200 pages of Death Ground to fill a much longer novel. At least four of the characters undergo some type of change, a cholera outbreak wipes out half of a settlement, and all of the bad guys are punished — usually with a bullet or six.
Somehow, Gorman manages to make each individual sympathetic (like the priest who isn't really, two brothers with an incredibly dysfunctional relationship, and a murderer who adopts an orphan) in an emotionally resonant narrative. With the existence of three other Leo Guild novels to help ease the transition via familiarity, Death Ground also acts as the ideal introduction to Westerns for the horror or crime fiction fan.
Really looking forward to reading this one!
ReplyDeleteYou and Crider publish more than I eat ... think of that. It's HUGE.
ReplyDeleteI preordered Murder in the Air and will get on this one as well.
The Guthrie westerns really gripped me a few years ago and I insist those times were a lot more "hardboiled" than what the world offers today (but that could be because if I ever had to pitch a tent, it'd be one long, cold night).
Look forward to another of yours and Bill's.
This is good news. The Leo Guild novels are all terrific, and DEATH GROUND is probably the best. I really like the cover art for the Leisure release too.
ReplyDeleteI hope it sells a bunch.
Ben
Jeez, I'm just now reading GUILD. Give me some time to catch up!
ReplyDeleteSounds great, I'm looking forward to reading this one. :)
ReplyDeleteYou are my superhero!
ReplyDeleteSounds good, Ed. Thanks for posting the heads up. I've enjoyed reading your Westerns.
ReplyDeleteEd Lynskey
I picked this up over the weekend and am really looking forward to reading it.
ReplyDeleteJeff P.
I've just posted a review of this at http://westernfictionreview.blogspot.com/
ReplyDeleteSteve