Randomly I will pull a Louis L’Amour book off my shelf for diversion. Recently a number of his books were returned to me, and End of the Drive caught my attention. I remembered it only as a series of short stories, and that was the case although one was really a novella. I enjoyed them but didn’t remember them at all. Well, it has been a few years since I last cracked the book. Interestingly enough the afterword explained that the short stories in this book were all seeds for later novels. Upon reflection, some of the connections made sense; others I would not have thought of.
L’Amour’s short stories are just that, quite short and no character development. The settings varied somewhat from desert to cow country, but it was all Old West stuff, and that was just fine. Plots were pretty simple; basic survival in the desert was the main issue in a couple of stories. Tell Sackett’s story told how he realized Griselda was not the girl he should marry. The title story was similar in that again the main character realizes the girl he had his eye on wasn’t what she seemed to be. The story about the preacher coming to town was a bit different and revolved around figuring out just what his game was. The novella had a romantic side to it along with some rustlers, gun slingers, a devious fellow who was the brains of it all, and the good guy and a former friend who wants the hero dead. It was packed with action; it had a showdown gunfight, and the hero gets the girl in the end, all very much what L’Amour delivers in most of his books.
In sum, it is standard stuff for Westerns; it was fun to read and a good diversion but nothing exceptional.