This
is Friday and that means Friday’s Forgotten Books. Patrick Ohl returns today with
his review of SIX SHOOTER SHOWDOWN
by William Colt Macdonald. More reviews and great books to read suggestions can
be found over at Patti’s blog.
Throughout my history as a blogger I
have eagerly taken advantage of any opportunity to discuss Westerns. Although
I’m miles from being an expert (my
knowledge of the genre is superficial at best), I really do admire it and love
watching old Westerns on TV, especially starring John Wayne. The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance is one
of my all-time favourite films. I highly enjoy Steve Hockensmith’s Holmes on the Range tales, and I love
the two novels William DeAndrea lived to write about Lobo Blacke and Quinn
Booker. But how else can I sneak a Western in a blog devoted to mysteries? Why,
by finding an example of the genres crossing over, that’s how!
William Colt Macdonald’s Six Shooter Showdown begins with ranch
owner Alex Bishop making a hefty withdrawal of sorts—he is borrowing seven
thousand dollars in gold from the bank, but since the bank hasn’t got that kind
of cash lying around in the open, the banker asks his brother in the city to
lend Bishop the money. Well, all goes smoothly—in fact, the lender, Gibson
Haynes, is almost paranoid in the precautions he takes. He counts out the money
himself, as does his secretary, as does Bishop. Then they roll it up into
newspaper so it doesn’t clink and stuff it into a sack. Then, the sack is tied up and sealed with wax, with an imprint made
by Bishop’s ring. From that moment on, the sack is never out of Bishop’s sight.
On the train ride, he sits with his feet resting on the sack. So that by the
time he reaches town, he’s got the same sack as he started off with.
Suddenly, gunshots sound! Some crazy
hombre stages a hold-up, shooting Bishop twice in the arm and riding off with
the sack of gold before being shot down by a witness, Matt Kaiser. He stumbles
into an alleyway and dies there, with the sack of gold nearby. The sack is
whisked off to the bank, where it is opened… and to the shock of everyone
present, the sack hasn’t got gold anymore, but silver coins worth only a fraction of the original seven grand!
Enter Rainbow Rhodes and his trusty
pard, Frosty Ferguson, who just happen to be riding by. Rainbow Rhodes is the
Sherlock Holmes of the bunch, and I admire the way the Great Detective has been
Westernised through his character. He can be tough when he has to be (which
happens fairly frequently). He can wisecrack with the best of ‘em, right
alongside the likes of Archie Goodwin. He can handle a six-shooter and as if
that weren’t enough, he can beat anybody in that noble pastime of chess.
The events onto which Rainbow and Frosty
have stumbled are intriguing… but to be perfectly honest, the Western elements
beat out the mystery elements any day. Let’s start with the good stuff: it’s a
good story. There are plenty of villains, a lot of nasty characters and
double-crossers who need to be taught a lesson. There’s nobody approaching the
sheer memorability of Liberty Valance, but then again, few villains do.
But the main reason the Western elements
beat out the mystery elements is this: the mystery elements are terrible! The solution to the impossible
substitution hasn’t got one ounce of inspiration behind it. It’s terribly
mechanical and routine. The witnesses
spend 200 pages saying “Goddamit man, I’m telling you all that I know!” before
suddenly remembering “Hey, wait-a-minute, you’re right! I was forgetting something!” So you never get a chance to solve the “how” and “who” is obvious
very early on. But not only is the solution unfair, it’s uninspired. There’s no
cleverness behind this trick. It’s dull, dull, dull, and the two false
solutions I came up with on my own time are far better than any solution, real
or false, proposed by the author.
Although I don’t regret reading this book, I’m glad I read it
via Interlibrary Loan, because I think I would have regretted purchasing it. It’s a solid and
enjoyable Western, though apart from its interpretation of a Westernised Great
Detective there’s little in it to make it truly memorable. With a decent
mystery, it would have simply been an average story. But because the mystery is
not very good or inspired, the overall quality of this book seems to me
slightly sub-par. It’s not like there’s anything morally objectionable to the
book, but there are definitely far better ones to read out there.
Patrick Ohl ©2013
The nineteen-year-old Patrick Ohl really
ought to be studying for exams, but instead of that he writes reviews of books
he reads on his blog, At the Scene of the Crime.
In his spare time he conducts genetic experiments in his top-secret laboratory,
hoping to create a creature as terrifying as the Giant Rat of Sumatra in a bid
to take over the world. His hobbies include drinking tea and going outside to
do a barbecue in -10°C weather.
2 comments:
Good review, and the book sounds like it might be fun as long as one doesn't get into it feeling the mystery element is of paramount importance. I've read a couple of Macdonald's Three Mesquiteers novels, The Sunrise Guns (a.k.a. Law of the .45s)--see http://kevintipplescorner.blogspot.com/2009/07/barrys-reviews-sunrise-guns-by-william.html--and The Singing Scorpion (a.k.a. Ambush at Scorpion Valley), and enjoyed them both. Each had elements you might find in a modern thriller. It was also interesting to see the author's treatment of his main characters versus the way the movies portrayed them.
Two westerns that include mystery elements I've read are Max Brand's Mystery Ranch--see http://kevintipplescorner.blogspot.com/2011/07/ffb-review-mystery-ranch-1930-by-max.html--and William McLeod Raine's Tangled Trails--see http://kevintipplescorner.blogspot.com/2012/02/ffb-review-tangled-trails-western.html. Like the title Patrick has reviewed, both are weak when their mystery elements are taken into consideration but entertaining otherwise.
I have not read the book in question or any of the ones Barry has read. I wouldn't go into a western expecting the mystery to be of paramount importance. I would expect the genre that the read is in to be of paramount importance.
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