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10 Reviews
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11 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Captures range-war violence and high-desert beauty.,
By bigbook "bigbook" (Gig Harbor, WA USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Utah Blaine: A Novel (Paperback)
A great L'Amour title, originally published in 1954 under the name Jim Mayo. As he did so often, L'Amour takes a stock dime-western situation, the range war, and weaves his story telling magic! The title character, a legendary town tamer, is very well fleshed out as he attempts to keep a pack of land-grabbing jackals from dividing up two of the largest, richest cattle ranches in Arizona. First they murder the owners...then the gang comes gunning for Blaine! Solid plot, great dialogue and some of L'Amour's best descriptive passages painting the rugged beauty of the mountains and valleys of the American Southwest.
5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Utah Blaine - no Mormon in him,
By "elfman20" (Folsom, CA United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Utah Blaine: A Novel (Paperback)
This gunslinger doesn't take crap from anyone. Stuck in a middle of a range war, he delivers what others fear, his gun's fury. Although L'amour carries some unbelievable moments in this story, there is a fun flowing read to the story.
7 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Michael J. Blaine, Gunfighter,
By
This review is from: Utah Blaine: A Novel (Paperback)
This book was originally published by Ace books back in 1954 under the name Jim Mayo, when Louis was bridging the pulp western magazines of the day, while later moving into his long running contract with Bantam Books. The setting of the book is central Arizona in the Verde River Valley, pretty much between Blood Basin and the Mazatzal Mountains. For the time of its writing, Utah Blaine is a very good book both in style and content. In general the book tells the story of Joe Neal's 46 Connected ranch and range of 300,000 prize acres of rangeland, with approximately 50,000 head of cattle on that range. An unsuccessful attempt is made on Joe's life, and later he is killed. The playing out of all the bad guys against the good guys, which at times number only 3, is the matrix of this western. I'm an inveterate western reader, and in my humble opinion a reader just has to 'suspend the ole disbelief' when reading these shoot-em-ups. Louis was one of the best of western writers, but he had some equals, and a few even better. One thing that I did not care for in this western is the name of Utah Blaine's eventual girlfriend/wife: Angie Kinyon; that name is too close for me at least, to the later Ange Kerry with Tell Sackett, in a couple later Sackett novels. Also, after "Rip" Coker has been gunshot, suffering 11 wounds, he is sidelined from the story. And at book's ending, we still are not told whether "Rip", will live or die, although it seems that he will pull through. Coker, as a Ranger, also appears in several of the Chick Bowdre Texas Ranger stories, too. Another item is the cache of supplies and ammunition, Utah says that they will be stashed in three separate locations, but never, ever, gives us more than the one original location at Cypress Butte. And never does he resupply anywhere near Cypress Butte, in general most of his resupply comes from a couple of ranch houses. Please do not, I repeat, DO NOT, take any of these as slams against the book. These are only incongruities that can exist in any number of Louis' books. I've read that at any one time he may have had as many as 4 typewriters going with a different story in each one. Would not be difficult to leave a few items ragged when swinging intermittenly from one typewritter to another. Louis L'Amour wrote some fine, classic, western stories while many others of his are only 3-star jobs; however, in the main I find him to be one of the best. One reviewer here said just to skip this book, with that I cannot agree, for this is no better nor any worse than most 3 or 4 star westerns. And at present I have several thousand westerns on my shelves. Read this one and enjoy, that is afterall, mainly why Louis spent his lifetime writing more than 100 of them. Semper Fi.
3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Start here!,
By Many Interests (The South) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Utah Blaine: A Novel (Paperback)
Yes, this book is a perfect starting point if you are new to Louis L'amour. How do I know? Because this is the book that started me reading Louis oh so many years ago when I was in the fourth grade.
Utah Blaine is all Louis L'amour. It is high-action, fast-paced, and just plain good story-telling. You won't be disappointed.
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
A relevant vision of far west and construction of the USA,
By Latour07 (Paris, France) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Utah Blaine: A Novel (Paperback)
Very American spirited book, which helps us to better understand the values of American opportunism, based on justice and the fact that entrepreneurs should not only assure it but could succeed as well. The story is well written. A nice western.
2.0 out of 5 stars
Can't Recommend, Don't Hate Myself For Finishing It,
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Utah Blaine: A Novel (Kindle Edition)
I picked this up as research, not because I had any direct interest in L'Amour's writings. And while I don't think I'll be going back to this particular well, I'm glad to have sampled it. This is pure pulp. The hero is incredible (that is to say, not credible), the villains are unwaveringly malicious. It's all a bunch of posturing and bluster interrupted by gunfighting. It never looks to the larger world or tries to find truth or meaning. It's the most mindless of entertainment.But when it entertains, it does so ruthlessly. About a third of the way in, the book turns into a non-stop guerilla war between the famous gunfighter Utah Blaine--who is somehow both young and a Colonel--and the evil ranchers trying to bust up the 46 Connected ranch. From 10,000 feet, it's all pretty silly, but it's easy to get caught up watching the characters chase each other around the plain while slowly picking off each other's armies. There was some bad perspective work going on that was annoying, but not a deal-breaker. Sometime's the style got to me: L'Amour is fond of saying things like "The gun of Timm" rather than "Timm' gun", which gets weird. And at no point did I ever feel anxious to find out what happens next. So it's a two or a three, closer to a two. Can't really recommend it, but I'm not angry at myself for finishing it.
5.0 out of 5 stars
Good,
By
This review is from: Utah Blaine: A Novel (Paperback)
Book was very good. Good. Good. Good. Good. Good. Good. Good. Good. Good. Good. Good. Good. Need I say more?
4.0 out of 5 stars
Fine L'Amour novel of a western gunslinger,
By New England Pat (Virginia, USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Utah Blaine: A Novel (Paperback)
Louis L'Amour's hero is a wanted man by Mexican authorities who comes to the aid of a lynching victim and finds himself in the middle of a vicious range war in Arizona. Utah Blaine, town tamer, Indian fighter, soldier of fortune and all-around tough guy faces heavy odds as greedy cattle ranchers move in on land deeded to Blaine which escalates the bloody struggle for the spoils of 46 Connected's rich grazing range. Blaine seems to have no weaknesses as a fighting man, with guns or fists, and is also a person of interest to the ladies. L'Amour follows his familiar pattern of loners who overcome great obstacles to see that justice is done.
5.0 out of 5 stars
Utah Blaine by Louis L'Amour,
By Mojoguy "Mojoguy" (Oxford, Ct USA) - See all my reviews
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Utah Blaine (The Louis L'Amour Hardcover Collection) (Imitation Leather)
I am a huge western genre fan in books and movies. So I have read many westerns.
Without doubt Louis L'Amour is the master of western writers; his books make you feel like you are there in the old west. Utah Blaine is one of his better stories and I highly recommend it !
0 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars
The worst of louis l'amour,
By
This review is from: Utah Blaine: A Novel (Paperback)
This story is so corny, it was one of l'amour's earliest books and in no way up to par for him after having written Hondo, utah blaine walks from old mexico to the center of arizona and saves an old rancher from hanging, talks the rancher into making him the manager of his ranch and has only been there a few days and knows the whole territory and blah blah blah. I have read most of Mr. L'amour's books and liked them all until this one, save your money and time.
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Utah Blaine by Louis L'Amour (Hardcover - 1976)
Used & New from: $13.30
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