A survivor of the Civil War, Clay Halser must flee to frontier America when he kills a man in self-defense, and his action brings him notoriety as a gunslinger and encounters with Billy the Kid and Wild Bill Hickock. (Western).
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
16 of 17 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Why Haven't More People Read This Great Book?,
By A Customer
This review is from: Journal Of Gun Years (Paperback)
While browsing through the bookstore, my eye caught this blurb on the cover of this novel. "The best novel I read last year." The quote is from Stephen King, no less. When I saw that the author was Richard Matheson, I was very surprised since I primarily know Matheson as a writer of horror. Westerns have not been an element of my previous reading history but I decided to give it a try. God, was I glad that I did! I now rate this novel as one of my top three all time favorites. Matheson's approach is to take the traditional story of the life of a gunslinger in the old West and look at it from the inside out. The novel takes the form of a journal written by Clay Hauser from his beginning as a frightened soldier in the Cival War to his inevitable destiny in a small mining town. From outlaw to lawman (and sometimes back again) during this ten year period, Matheson does a wonderful job in depicting the deterioration of a potentially great man. I felt genuinely sad at the end of this powerful novel. I've been recommending this novel throughout the Internet whenever I get the chance. I think that it's time that people began to realize that the modern Western is a 'new' genre filled with interesting writing and stories. I would have thought that people would have been more influenced by the success of Lonesome Dove. (Another of my top three favorites, by the way.) C'MON, people, get on the ball and stop being afraid to explore new avenues of literature. Because that's exactly what this novel is, Great Literature!!
6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Smooth genre hopping,
By paul mason "dedarkone" (Barrie On) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Journal Of Gun Years (Paperback)
Richard Mattheson is arguably best known for his novel(la) I AM LEGEND, a classic horror novel which much has been written about by fans, critics, and peers. I bring this up because some authors write in a genre very well and experiment or cross over to another genre and even if the story is as strong are not as successful in their second writing category. Even master Stephen King's Dark Tower series where he moves easily from his renown horror tales to dark fantasy isn't as critically or popularly acclaimed as his other books. Mattheson moved his horrific prose into an old west setting gracefully and smoothly. He uses the same economy of words to tell the story of Marshall Halser, who not much of a plot spoiler to add gets shot in opening chapters.The narrotor is Halser not from beyond the grave per se but in the form of his journals in the hands of a friend and journalist who wishes to publicize them to seperate myth from man. As I said Mattheson is spare in his writing not using five pages of details where one will do, instead he writes a tight plot making this a quick fun read. Incidentally it won the 1991 Spur award so my praise of his genre transition is a little redundant hehehe.
4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Living and Dying By The Gun!,
By
This review is from: Journal of the Gun Years (Mass Market Paperback)
My admiration for Richard Matheson kicked up a notch when I came across JOURNAL OF THE GUN YEARS in the Western section of B&N. I had no idea Matheson dabbled in the western genre but, after reading this tightly-crafted, gripping account of a legendary shootist, I say "More power to him." JOURNAL OF THE GUN YEARS is a winner, actually a Spur Award winner for Best Western novel published in 1991.
Matheson's novel traces the fictional life and times - and crimes - of Clay Halser, a directionless farm boy with a talent for shooting. After serving in the Civil War, he drifts westward into a career as a desperado-turned-lawman before meeting his inevitable fate. Though Matheson's novel tells the story of one man's checkered career, it is equally a cautionary tale on fame and the cost it extracts from that individual. The media transforms Halser into a storied, larger-than-life character, an image that eventually overwhelms the man. By the end of this affecting novel, the "great gunfighter" has been lionized and feted but is empty, lonely and scared with nary a true friend in sight. Matheson does a wonderful job of channeling the Old West. Halser seems an amalgam of Hickok, Wyatt Earp with a little Billy the Kid thrown in. One of Halser's best friends seems a Doc Holliday doppelganger and so on. JOURNAL OF THE GUN YEARS is exciting, gritty and poignant; all in all, a great read. Recommended. .
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