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Stringer #1

Stringer

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For once, they were sending Stringer on a nice, easy assignment. All he had to do was scribble out a story about an outlaw gunned down fifty years before. As far as Stringer was concerned, it was an ideal excuse to make a trip back to his hometown in the Sierras. But it's a homecoming of hot lead and hotter ladies. Someone wants Stringer dead almost as bad as the local females want him alive. Stringer doesn't know why so much trouble is suddenly finding him, but he suspects it must be mighty ugly for the town to welcome a hometown boy with double dealing and easy death…

Paperback

First published July 1, 1987

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Lou Cameron

163 books8 followers

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Displaying 1 - 3 of 3 reviews
Profile Image for Malum.
2,840 reviews168 followers
August 22, 2025
Lou Cameron wrote this about ten years after he ghostwrote Longarm and the Highgraders. The book covers in this series even proudly proclaim things like "From the creators of Longarm!" and "In the tradition of Longarm!". This is important because, while the plot (what there is of one) is different from Highgraders, it feels like Cameron used his notes from that book when writing this one. Both take place in Calaveras county. Both mention Mark Twain and the bandit Murietta. Both have our protagonist doing research at the local library and hooking up with the secretly slutty librarian at the librarian's house. I could go on.

The bigger problem, though, is that this isn't a good book. The plot is barely there and nothing happens for long stretches at a time. Stringer talks to someone, then he rides somewhere and talks to someone else. Then he gets back on his horse and rides somewhere else to talk to another person. I was trying my hardest to be invested but by the middle of the book I just wanted it to end. This very short book felt like it was 500 pages.

For as campy as they are, the Longarm books can be pretty fun and Longarm is a fun character to follow around. This, however was like watching paint dry and Stringer himself is as bland as beige. It's weird, too, because Cameron wrote some of the better Longarm novels. I guess he just decided to phone this one in.
Profile Image for Ian Pattinson.
Author 21 books2 followers
June 12, 2017
A Western set in the early years of the twentieth century, so there was some interesting use of the telephone, with rural 'party lines' for communication.

'Stringer' McKail travels from San Francisco- where he's one of those too-honest-to-be-rich-and-famous newspaper reporters- to Calaveras Countys, where he grew up. Not long after arriving, people are trying to kill him. Soon after that, he meets the first of a string of women who want to sleep with him.

It's all got something to do with a stagecoach robbery fifty years earlier, and a bandito who most likely never existed- his name translates from Mexican Spanish as 'Grumpy Joe', and may have been a catch all to keep the 'Anglos' from persecuting the local Mexican community. Somebody thinks they can track down the treasure, and they're not above killing and kidnapping to get to it.
Displaying 1 - 3 of 3 reviews

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