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Wednesday, 24 June 2020

Brit-west: Riding The Range With Jo Walpole

Here's an interview I did with fellow author, Paul Bishop, way back in 2017...

During its long love affair with the Western, England has produced a long list of iconic genre writers, most of whom have never been West of the Mississippi. Bestselling Western authors such as J. T. Edson (English author of 137 Westerns, many of which are still in print), Matt Chisholm/Cy James/Luke Jones (all pseudonyms for Peter Watts), and the revered Piccadilly Cowboys (the subject of an upcoming blog post) have all made significant, enduring, and popular contributions to the Western genre. This Brit-West tradition continues today with a number of English authors gaining popular acclaim for their six-gun shoot-‘em-ups.
 
Over the next few blog posts, I’ll be sharing interviews with a few of England’s current Western genre practitioners. First to pull up a seat around the chuck wagon campfire is Joanne ‘Jo’ Walpole...Joanne’s first western was published in 2005. Since then she has written five more westerns, one civil war drama and a collection of contemporary shorts published under her own name and her better known pseudonym Terry James. She is currently writing a new series under the pseudonym, Joe Slade. She lives in central England with her husband Terry, where she reads, walks, follows current affairs, and continues writing westerns.

For more, click here.

Friday, 19 June 2020

Micro read - 60 seconds or less

This came from a writing prompt – first line of any song


I picked – Dixie Chicks ~ Cowboy Take Me Away

 

~*~


“I said I wanna touch the earth.”

 

The lawdog looked up at the prisoner and frowned. “When I asked if you had any last words, they weren’t exactly what I had in mind.”

 

Bo Brown smiled but there was no joy in it, only mournful disappointment. He supposed he knew what the sheriff was getting at. He’d seen enough hangings to know that the accused man usually broke down, confessed his sins, asked forgiveness and called God his friend.

 

But Bo couldn’t bring himself to do it. He had committed the crime. True. But he felt no remorse. It had been old man Smithson or him and at the time he had thought his life was the better option. But now, with the noose chafing against the day old stubble around his throat, maybe on reflection a bullet to the brain would have been preferable to a slow choking death.



Thursday, 18 June 2020

Short story: The Double Cross by Jo Walpole ©2010

This is a short story I wrote for fun back in 2010. It was inspired by an episode of Alias Smith & Jones (The McCready Bust). 
I hope you enjoy it!


“Raise you,” said the player in the hand-made suit, the smile on his lips failing to hide the contempt in his narrowed eyes. “It’s gonna cost you everything you’ve got to see Randall Rockwell’s cards.”

Rick Bodine glanced at the two aces in his hand, then scrutinised the two queens and an extra ace in the middle of the table. His luck had been off until now and his pile of money, if that’s what you could call twenty dollars and a few cents, was a shadow of what it had been less than an hour before. He considered the odds. The pot on the table, at over a hundred bucks, was worth everything he had, but his confidence had taken a battering and he continued to ponder despite the excitement fizzing in his belly. Finally, under the weight of the stares boring into him from the other two players, he glanced again at his cards and reached for his money.

“Hold it right there, Bodine.”

As instructed, he let his hand hover in midair as his gaze swung towards the batwing doors where the order had originated. Around him, the low rumble of voices, the high tinkle of laughter and the tinny clank of the piano faded as all attention switched between him and the figure silhouetted against the midday sun. Rick’s heart started beating faster, his senses sharpened, his muscles tensed. Every nerve and sinew tightened as the tick-tock of the clock behind the bar seemed to mark the arrival of trouble. Uneasily, Rick swallowed against the feeling of trepidation that left his mouth dry as cotton despite the bottle of whiskey he’d drunk.

“Don’t touch that money, Bodine, or it’ll be the last thing you ever do,” the speaker promised, walking slowly and steadily into the saloon.

As the rhythmic thud of boot heels on the sawdust-covered floor halted, a ripple of surprise hissed around the half empty barroom, but no-one dared take their eyes off the unfolding scene.

“Dru, I told you not to come looking for me,” Rick said, easing his hand down to his leg where an old six-shooter rested comfortably against his thigh. “You’re making a fool of yourself.”

Dru, a pretty little blonde with big blue eyes, smiled and even Rick didn’t believe what he’d just said. Any man with eyes could see the only fool in the room was him. Already he had noted a bummer and a wet-behind-the-ears cowpoke smartening up to step in. And he couldn’t blame them. She looked especially fetching today in a bright yellow dress that skimmed her figure in all the right places but left enough to the imagination to keep a man interested.  He clenched his jaw and steeled himself against her charms, which had already nearly cost him his freedom, reminding himself that his future was at stake. Maybe even his life. Drusilla Pringle might well be the most single-minded, ornery female he’d ever met but she was no match for him. No, sir. He was a gambler. A man used to having the odds stacked against him and coming out on top.

“I’m not the one about to lose my stage fare out of town,” she said, trying for the last word as usual.

Well, this time...

“Go home, Dru. Nothing you can say or do will change my mind about leaving. I already told you, I’m not the marrying kind.” He glanced around the room, seeing a mixture of surprise, sympathy and downright disbelief on the faces of the other patrons. “The rest of you, go about your business.”

Like one of those new player piano contraptions he’d seen in San Francisco, the scene picked up where it had left off, and turning back to the game, Rick pushed his money into the centre of the table, throwing his cards down face up as he called the bet.

The dark-eyed gambler, Randall Rockwell, did likewise, showing a king and a queen. Rick’s heart surged, the dealer seeming to stall as he slid the next card off the deck and tossed it down. The queen of clubs. Rick struggled not to smile. After a series of bad hands he was about to clean up and win the biggest pot of the day, buy the supplies he needed and ride away from this crazy-ass town and a woman who even now was setting his senses on fire as she sidled up beside him and rested her soft hip against his arm as she leaned in to see the game unfold.

The last card floated softly to the scarred table top. The last queen. Damn it!

Rockwell smiled as he added the winnings to his already considerable pile. “Hard luck. Never underestimate a lady, that’s what I always say.”

“Seems like you’ll be here for a while yet,” Dru said, patting Rick’s shoulder.

He laughed off-handedly, although he felt far from confident. “I’ll get another stake and then I’ll be gone.”

“You’re that determined?” she asked, a hint of disappointment edging her tone. “Am I that unattractive to you?”

“It’s nothing personal, darlin’,” he said, laying on the swagger. “You and I are just too different. It’d never work.”

She considered for a moment, her mouth pursed into a not unattractive pout as her gaze flashed to Rockwell.

“Miss...Pringle, isn’t it?” he said. “May I have a word?” With a flick of his fingers, he motioned her to him.

She hesitated for only a moment, then circling the players as they waited for the next hand to be dealt, she leaned over to allow him to speak confidentially against her ear. Rick tensed, his eyes narrowing at his antagonist as the man’s slender fingers wrapped around Dru’s waist, keeping her close while he concluded his whispering. When Rockwell was finished, he took her hand in his and guided it below the table and out of sight.

Rick’s temper simmered close to boiling. What the hell were they doing? Was she so desperate to find a husband that she was prepared to act the part of a saloon girl to get one? Or was it a ploy to make him jealous?

“Dru!” he said, more sharply than he intended.

Straightening up, she shared a final smile with Rockwell and returned to Rick’s side. “I have a proposition for you, Rick. You want money and I want a husband. How about a bet? You take the cards, shuffle, cut, whatever else you do and I’ll guarantee to cut the ace of hearts on the first try. If I don’t, I’ll give you five hundred dollars and never bother you again. If I do...you’ll marry me tomorrow and I’ll be the best wife a man ever had.”

Rick hesitated. He knew she was good for the money. Her father owned the bank and half the town and he doted on her. She could ask him for any amount and he would give it to her. Hell, the old man would probably give it to her just to get rid of Rick. As for the likelihood of her cutting an ace, let alone the ace of hearts, even a card sharp could fumble it and Dru was all fingers and thumbs at the best of times, struggling to hold a deck let alone cut it. So why would she make a bet like that?

“Sounds to me like you win either way, Bodine,” Rockwell said, interrupting his thoughts. “Hell, if you won’t take the bet, I’ll be happy to.”

“I’ll take the bet,” he said, more quickly than he’d intended. “You gentleman understood the terms, right?” He waited for a nod from the other players at the table, gaining additional confirmation from the crowd gathering as word of the wager between the banker’s daughter and the no-account drifter spread quickly around the room. “Then let’s get this over with so I can get out of this town.”

Taking up the deck that had already cost him the best part of two hundred dollars, he settled for a simple shuffle, a single-handed cut and another shuffle, then satisfied with his handiwork, he placed the deck on the table and leaned back in his chair, the feeling of impending victory warming him to the core and bringing a smile to his lips that almost shamed him with its smugness.

“You’re happy that you’ve shuffled them enough?” Dru asked, sounding a little uncertain, and looking slightly more flushed than usual.

“Yup.”

“All right then. May the best man win.”

“Or woman,” Rockwell added, smirking.

Dru glanced towards him, all nervous blushes and shy smiles. In return, he gave a decisive nod. Rick could almost see the greasy card shark getting ready to step in and claim the girl for himself when she failed to win. Beneath the table, Rick’s hand shifted unnoticed to the six-gun, his fingers undoing the thong that held it in place. He told himself he should be watching the cards, but he couldn’t take his eyes off the gambler. He thought he saw him shift his shoulder ever so slightly, the way a man might if he was priming himself to use a concealed Derringer.

And then Dru stepped back, clearing a space between them.

Something flashed at the corner of Rick’s eye, a thud rocked the table. In the same instant, he came into a half crouch, the six-gun appearing in his hand as his chair crashed into a whore who stood behind him. He almost squeezed the trigger, but to his surprise Rockwell hadn’t moved and the assembled onlookers seemed not to be concerned with his actions. As he gained perspective, he realised all eyes were on the cards, shocked silence holding everyone in place, disbelieving, unmoving. Only Rockwell seemed unsurprised as he reached across and, with some difficulty, extracted the stiletto blade from the deck. Shuffling his leg to the side, he slid the deadly knife back into its sheath inside his right boot, then seemingly unconcerned proceeded to collect the cards and deal them into a pile until he reached the ace of hearts.

“She did it, Bodine. She cut the ace of hearts.” He sent it sailing across the table to land squarely in front of Rick, its centre clearly pierced for all to see. “Maybe you should have listened to what I told you before.”

Rick laughed despite the shock that still held him in awe of the trick that had been played on him. “Never underestimate a lady,” he mumbled, handing himself willingly to the woman he would gladly spend the rest of his life with.

Sunday, 14 June 2020

REVIEW: Nowhere To Run (A Maggie O'Bannen Western Book 3)

There are a couple of nice set-ups in this, the third Maggie O’Bannen tale by Joe Slade AKA Jo Walpole. Firstly it’s neat how Slade has Maggie appear in a series of dime novels (something that was introduced in book # 2, if I remember rightly), and it is one of these dime novels that triggers the plot in this book (*). Secondly, it’s neat the way that plot unfolds – with Maggie being forced to play the hunted one in a deadly game of cat and mouse. I’ve always been a sucker for such plots ever since I read Richard Connell’s The Most Dangerous Game as a young teenager.

This book is as fast-paced and as relentless as volumes #1 and #2 and Maggie returns to stage centre as she fights to protect her friends and colleagues. You won’t need to have read the first two volumes to enjoy this one, but that said, doing so will help you understand Maggie’s back story and who several of the characters are (plus you’ll enjoy those books!). In this one, we’ve hardly started and we’ve had a bank robbery, a stage-coach hold-up, a couple of killings, a shoot-out at a remote settlement, the odd amputation, and some lovin’, too. Then the book really takes off…

The main centre-piece is that aforementioned deadly game of cat and mouse as an unarmed Maggie has to somehow make it from one end of town to the other. She is ably assisted in this scene by the bounty hunter Brad Cooper (prior to his role in A Star Is Born !). Bullets fly, and the writing is explicit and gritty. I won’t give away too much, but the ending sets up volume # 4 nicely.

Recommended, so long as you like blood, gore, and relentless western gun-slinging action!

(*) There’s also a throwaway mention in this book that suggests the pictures of Maggie in the dime novel are starting to get close enough to the real thing, so that people can recognize her from the illustrations. I wonder if this means that whoever is writing the dime novels, or at least illustrating them, is someone close to Maggie, or at least out there in the real west, as opposed to being back in a New York tenement somewhere? Perhaps we’ll learn more as Maggie’s adventures continue.

Derek Rutherford 5* Amazon review 22 October 2018

NB: This review was done for the original release of this title. The book content has changed  but not in any way that affects this review and the reviewer has given their permission for it to be posted.

Tuesday, 9 June 2020

The Last Drop of Water 1911 - Silent Short Film by D.W.Griffith


Proof, if any were needed, that the western genre transcends language. A thirteen minute movie that embodies all the traditions of a classic western, and not a word spoken.

I came across this at Jeff Arnold's West where he has given it a thorough write up.

If you have the time, his blog in general is well worth a look.






Sunday, 7 June 2020

REVIEW: Wanted: Dead (A Maggie O’Bannen Western Book 2)

Another winner!


This, the second Maggie O’Bannon tale, kicks off where the first one (Days of Evil) ended. Maggie and her side-kicks (Doc, Rick, and Leo) are heading back to Maggie’s hometown to uncover the truth about her kidnapping all those years ago.



It’s another winner, and just like the first volume, is a non-stop roller-coaster of relentless action, gun-play, fist-fights, knife-fights, and double-dealing. Maggie spends a bit more time off-stage in this one, and it’s her cohorts, especially Rick and Doc, who - alongside the wonderful Sheriff Ben Anderson - drive the story onwards. But Maggie’s there, of course, for the big finale.



There’s a great mystery underpinning this episode, and the violence is toned down somewhat from the first volume. It makes for a nice style of western that is both traditional and a little different. 



I look forward to seeing what Maggie does next.



Recommended!


Derek Rutherford 5* Amazon review 28 April 2018

NB: This review was done for the original release of this title. The book content has not changed in any way and the reviewer has given their permission for the review to be posted.

Thursday, 4 June 2020

REVIEW: Days Of Evil (A Maggie O’Bannen Western Book 1)

NB: This review was done for the original release of this title. The book content has not changed in any way and the reviewer has given their permission for the review to be posted.

Tuesday, 2 June 2020

Classic Western Series Maggie O'Bannen now available in one volume


Days Of Evil

Kidnapped at the age of sixteen, Maggie has survived the fickle temper of notorious outlaw Mad Dog Frank O’Bannen for seven years. Now he is dead and she is about to find out that there are worse ways to live and die than as the wife of a wanted man.
Frank had prepared her as best he could for what would follow but when she leaves her prison in the hills, she has the blood of three men on her hands and knows the feel of hot lead. Soon her hard-won freedom is in doubt and she finds herself pursued by Frank’s old partner, a man with a vicious reputation and more than one score to settle.
Free at last, Maggie has Frank’s gun, her keen wits and new friends to help her, but will they be enough to save her from the brutality of a maniac bent on revenge?

Wanted: Dead

‘Frank O’Bannen wanted five thousand dollars to let you go. I offered him ten thousand to kill you.’

Kidnapped at sixteen, Maggie O’Bannen returns home after seven years to be reunited with her father. No longer the idealistic girl she was, her return is meant to help put her demons to rest. Instead, it sets in motion a series of events that will put her on a collision course with trouble, and this time, Maggie has no qualms about speeding towards it.

Discovering who was behind her abduction is just the beginning. Murder with no apparent motive and no suspect soon brings her under the scrutiny of the local sheriff. With the body count rising, Maggie fights for her life against a foe who will stop at nothing to win.

As events escalate, Maggie will need to rely on her friends more than ever before if she is to survive. But at what cost?

Nowhere To Run

‘What if I don’t want to play?’
‘Then your friends die one by one until you do.’

After surviving a series of traumatic events, Maggie O’Bannen is at last starting to heal and the scars of the past are fading. Not to mention that things with her close friend Doc John Simpkins could be about to get interesting. However, the depiction of her exploits in a series of dime novels mean her reputation reaches far and wide and when a couple of down on their luck gunmen believe what they read, they hatch a plan to make Maggie their quarry in a deadly hunt.
A bungled bank robbery, a kidnapping and the arrival of an old friend bearing bad news are only the beginning as Maggie is drawn into a fight for her life. Armed with a short temper, outlaw Frank O’Bannen’s Schofield and the resolve to use both, she refuses to let anyone stand in her way.
Outnumbered and outgunned, she might be. What her enemies don’t realize, is that her biggest weakness is also her greatest strength and when there’s nowhere to run, they’ll be the ones looking for a place to hide.