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Hellfire Canyon
 
 

Hellfire Canyon [Kindle Edition]

Max McCoy
4.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)

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Editorial Reviews

Product Description

Towering, flame-haired Alf Bolin is a ruthless young outlaw with a passion for quoting fine literature, slaughtering anyone who gets in his way and keeping the body parts as souvenirs. Already with forty murders under his belt - and counting - the locals of Branson, Missouri, live in a state of constant terror. Zach Thomas is a federal trooper with a personal vendetta strong enough to send him deep undercover - into the dark heart of Bolin's vicious gang. Fuelled by hatred and justice, he soon wins Bolin's confidence and waits for the killer to turn his back...

Product Details

  • Format: Kindle Edition
  • File Size: 1317 KB
  • Print Length: 253 pages
  • Page Numbers Source ISBN: 0786017805
  • Publisher: Pinnacle (February 1, 2007)
  • Sold by: Amazon Digital Services
  • Language: English
  • ASIN: B001E5RS2I
  • Text-to-Speech: Enabled
  • Lending: Enabled
  • Average Customer Review: 4.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #247,575 Paid in Kindle Store (See Top 100 Paid in Kindle Store)
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Customer Reviews

3 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
4.7 out of 5 stars (3 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Hellfire Canyon, May 24, 2007
By 
Hellfire Canyon is the story of Jacob Gamble: outlaw, renegade and general trouble-maker. He is the archetypal western outlaw, with one exception: He is likable, and rather than the antagonist, he is the hero.

The novel begins when three men trample into young Jacob's farmhouse and demand breakfast from his mother. They are confederate soldiers with a platoon of blue bellies hot on their trail. This is the catalyst that shapes Jacob's life--the Union soldiers burn down his home, and he discovers his father is in lockup scheduled to be hanged. Jacob and his mother set out to save his father, but instead find themselves crossing Missouri in the company of a stranger, facing cutthroats, soldiers, the coming winter, and finally forced induction into the gang of the notorious killer Alf Bolin.

Hellfire Canyon is not the typical. There is violence and even gun play, but there is more--a yearning and understanding of history, legend, and even folklore. Gamble is an admitted liar, killer and thief, but he--the story is written in first person--portrays himself never as a victim, but as a survivor. Interestingly, in the opening pages of the novel he casts doubt on everything that is to come: And I won't tell the truth. Instead, I will spin the tale that is expected--that I was forced by circumstances at the tender age of thirteen to become the youngest member of the Bolin gang.

Hellfire Canyon is a campfire story. It is raw, tender, and fresh, but we are left knowing it isn't the real story. It is the story the witness--Jacob Gamble--wants us to know, or perhaps more accurately thinks we want to know. It is more folklore and legend than anything else, and I loved every word.

Ben Boulden
Gravetapping: a thing for books
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars The Making of an Outlaw, October 26, 2009
By 
An interesting story of Jacob Gamble and how he became an outlaw at thirteen when he was taken in by Alf Bolin, the meanest, most ruthless, vilest outlaw in all Missouri, or anyway as the tale is told many years later by Jacob Gamble to a newspaper reporter. The War Between the States, South against North, Rebel against Yankee; sometimes reading of those times, one wonders how one nation can turn upon itself so completely. Caught in the Kansas/Missouri border warfare, Jacob Gamble and his mother, their house burned by Yankees after they are forced to give aid to guerrilla fighters, set out on foot to walk the many miles to where their husband/father is imprisoned. They fail in that endeavor, but do get another man released and they're on the road again. Eventually, they met up with Bolin and his gang of cutthroats and Jacob becomes a part of his gang. But Jacob isn't rotten all the way through, or is he? A good read, I found myself reading late into the night to see what would happen next. Eunice Boeve, author of Ride a Shadowed Trail
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5.0 out of 5 stars A Must Read! Two Thumbs Up!!, December 29, 2011
This review is from: Hellfire Canyon (Kindle Edition)
McCoy has always been one of my favorite authors, from Indiana Jones, to Westerns. His attention to historical detail--no doubt a by-product of his work as an award-winning journalist--is both impeccable and impressive. He's outdone himself with Damnation Road. It is no wonder the book won a 2011 Spur Award from the Western Writers Association.

The tale begins in 1898. It is the story of Jacob Gamble, a man conflicted by his wish to go straight, and the bitter deep-rooted knowledge that the conspiracies of life, and his outlaw genetics would always somehow, someway, prevent every attempt.

McCoy skillfully weaves in Campbell's violent past with tumultuous, "current" action, no holds barred. Gambles is a tough guy, unyielding but with great sensitivity, which--though deeply buried--fuels his desire to be something other than what he is, at the same paradoxically resigning him to the reality of being nothing more than he's meant to be.

The vernacular, action and detail is sterling McCoy. A must read for any aficionado of the personalities and legends of the historical West. Two thumbs up!

Reid Lance Rosenthal
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More About the Author

Max McCoy is an award-winning novelist and journalist. He is best known for his westerns (which have been described as "western noir") and his original Indiana Jones adventures.

He won the Spur award in 2008 from the Western Writers of America for his novel, "Hellfire Canyon." It's the story of a 13-year-old boy and his mother who walk across Missouri during the Civil War and become part of the gang led by Alf Bolin, the notorious Ozark serial killer. "Hellfire Canyon" was also named a Kansas 2008 Notable Book.

McCoy is the author of sixteen other books, including four original Indiana Jones adventures for LucasFilm and the novelization of Steven Spielberg's epic miniseries, "Into the West."

His fiction debut, "The Sixth Rider," about the 1892 raid on Coffeyville's banks by the Dalton Gang, was published by Doubleday and won the Spur/Medicine Pipe Award for Best First Novel by the Western Writers of America.

USA Today has described his writing as "powerful." In addition to westerns and historical fiction, McCoy also writes contemporary adventures. Publishers Weekly called his novel, "The Moon Pool," an "intelligent thriller... tightly drawn characters, a vile villain and a satisfying, thought-provoking conclusion make this a compelling read."

McCoy grew up in Baxter Springs and most of his books are set in Kansas or Missouri. He began his career in journalism at the Pittsburg Morning Sun and writing for pulp magazines such as True Detective and Front-Page Detective. Most recently, he was the investigative writer for The Joplin Globe. He has won first-place awards in investigative journalism for his stories on serial killers and hate groups.

His latest book is "Canyon Diablo," a sequel to "Hellfire Canyon." McCoy's an assistant professor of journalism at Emporia State University. His newest book, "Damnation Road, will be released in September 2010.

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