From the massively magnificent archive here at Casa
Tipple and Home Eatery Library…
Austin, Texas,
resident David E. Hilton's debut novel Kings of Colorado is in
turns heart breaking and uplifting. A novel that is not easy to describe while
filled with tragedy and ultimately redemption. At its core, it is the tale of
one man finally finding peace with a very brutal past decades later.
It was the
summer of 1963 when the abusive world William Sheppard knew changed forever. He
was thirteen and one time too many his father came home in a drunken rage and
started terrorizing his family. When it was over, his father was near death
because his thirteen year old son William Shepard had stabbed him multiple
times with a pocket knife.
By September, thanks
to the order of the court, William Sheppard was on his way from Chicago to the
Swope Ranch Boy's reformatory in Colorado. The legendary reform school located
near Gunnison, Colorado in a high mountain valley isolated from the world is to
be his home for the next twenty four months. That is if he can survive the
altitude of over thirteen thousand feet, the extreme weather, the other
inmates, and the guards. Of all the threats the guards may be the worst
threat as, with a couple of exceptions, they exist to abuse the boys in every
way possible. The ranch sustains itself by using the boys as a cheap labor
source to break and take care of the wild horses that are shipped in at regular
intervals. The threats are many but the reality of life is put very simply by
Warden Walter Barrow:
“We'll break you, Mr.
Sheppard. Just like we break each of the animals outside. One step at a
time.”
(Page 22)
Those in charge use
the natural environmental elements of the ranch being located in a valley above
thirteen thousand feet, intimidation, weapons, and other factors to control the
population. Days away from anywhere, knowing that to resist means being shot,
etc. means that nobody is going anywhere. This prison may have beauty around it
and nothing in terms of walls or guard towers but it is a lock down prison in
every sense that matters.
What follows is a
tale of William Sheppard during those brutal 24 months and the aftermath of his
ordeals decades later. It is a harsh and unforgiving world that bears a
striking resemblance to Lord of the Flies in a far different
location. One wonders if it was pitched as that when the author was seeking
representation and publication. If so, it was a truly perfect fit that
encapsulates well what this novel is about.
An emotionally
powerful book with both humor and sheer tragedy often mere lines of text apart,
Kings of Colorado is a complex book that is very hard to define
or explain in great detail without destroying the very story lines that serve
as the fabric of the novel. It reads like a memoir with a voice far older than
the author would appear, and yet there are elements of any good mystery fiction
story. Crimes have been and are committed, there are several mysteries, and
other elements could easily move the book into the mystery field.
Not for the squeamish
or faint hearted, the graphic moments in this story of language and description
fit well into the story. They are not added for shock value or to pad the word
count. They are in there because they fit seamlessly into the text as a whole.
By the end of the book, you will wonder if these events really did happen?
Material supplied by the good folks of the Plano Texas Public Library System.
Kevin R. Tipple © 2011, 2019, 2023
2 comments:
What a great review, Kevin. This kind of survival story appeals to me, so I'm going to check this book out.
Thank you for reading!
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