All hell's broken loose in Mulrooney, and it's up to Dusty Fog to restore order. But it won't be easy--not with a pair of smooth-talking slicks out to swindle the town in a phoney diamond scam...a high-stakes card game with enough .44 caliber bad will to start a war...and a pair of shapely she-devils brawling in the mud right on Main Street! The only thing certain is that Dusty's going to earn his pay, every red cent of it!
John Thomas Edson is an English writer of Westerns.
He was born in 1928.He was obsessed with Westerns from an early age and often "rewrote" cowboy movies that he had seen at the cinema. One thing that always intrigued him was the minutiae—how did the baddie's gun jam? What were the mechanics of cheating at cards? How did Westerners really dress and speak?
His writing was helped to develop by a schoolteacher who encouraged him. Now lives in Leicester, Leicestershire.[citation needed]
During his 20s and 30s, Edson served in His Majesty's Armed Forces for 12 years as a Dog Trainer. Cooped up in barracks for long periods, he devoured books by the great escapist writers (Edgar Rice Burroughs, Robert McCraig, Nelson C. Nye and Edgar Wallace). He also sat through hours of movies starring John Wayne, Randolph Scott, Errol Flynn and his all-time favourite, Audie Murphy.
His first appearance in print was "Hints On Self-Preservation when attacked by a War Dog" in the Osnabrück camp magazine Shufti in 1947. Acquiring a typewriter in the early 1950s and putting it to good use while posted to Hong Kong, by the time of his discharge he had written 10 Westerns, an early version of Bunduki and the first of the short detective-type stories starring Waco.
Upon leaving HM forces, JT won second prize (with Trail Boss) in the Western division of a Literary Competition run by Brown & Watson Ltd, which led to the publication of 46 novels with them, becoming a major earner for the company.
He had the need for supplementary income from time-to-time and also served as a postman, and the proprietor of a fish 'n' chip shop. Furthermore, he branched out as a writer and wrote five series of short stories (Dan Hollick, Dog Handler) for the Victor boys papers, and wrote the "box captions" for comic strips, which instilled discipline and the ability to convey maximum information with minimum words.
His writing career forged ahead when he joined Corgi Books in the late '60s, which gave JT exposure through a major publishing house, as well as the opportunity to branch out from the core Westerns into the Rockabye County, the science-fiction hero Bunduki and other series.
A rather god Western tale, but not quite up to the usual J T Edson standard, with a couple of rather unrelated story lines detracting from the main event.
This book follows and overlaps with Decision for Dusty Fog and the last few pages directly set up the preceding book The Code of Dusty Fog. It is the final book in which the floating outfit act as law enforcement for the town of Mulrooney. It also contains a parallel Belle Starr story which is little more than an excuse for one of JT's most graphic girl fights. However, despite what the description says neither the diamond scam, the poker game, or the girl fight take place in Mulrooney. Instead Dusty and crew have their hands full with a Rio Bravo like scenario where they are holding a murder who's kin are trying to break him out of jail. Like Chance, Dusty calls ahead to the jail in a way that warns them of danger; taking his cue Frank sends Dusty out of the line of fire while the Stumpy like jailer guards the prisoner with a shot gun. In typical JT fashion, the jailer 'Pickle Barrel' was actually killed in the second book but appears alive and well in every book there after. Also in JT fashion, he can't resist the temptation to claim that the fence sought out by Belle Starr is a decedent of a Charles Dickens character.