Weird Westerns discussion
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What Was Your First Weird Western?




Love the Merkabah Rider!








Trying to think of my first Weird Western, though, and it was probably the Gunslinger. I don't really consider the others in that series to be weird, except for Wizard and Glass and Wolves of the Callah, and Wizard and Glass just bored me all to hell.
I really dig the Merkabah series, too.

Back to the Future 3 and The Adventures of Brisco County, Jr got me started. Years later, I remember Wild Wild West hitting theaters but I never actually watched it til it was on cable years later.
But then, in 2007, I read The Gunslinger. That changed everything. I became ravenous. I don't know how but I found out about the Merkabah Rider series and ended up becoming friends with Ed as well.
And now I'm working on putting out my own!
But then, in 2007, I read The Gunslinger. That changed everything. I became ravenous. I don't know how but I found out about the Merkabah Rider series and ended up becoming friends with Ed as well.
And now I'm working on putting out my own!

Good luck in the publishing venture!
No shame. It was a Fox show afterall and it was probably practice for firefly.
Another one that borders on the weird frontier, for movies, was Tremors. Least til the 4th one when they went full tilt.
Another one that borders on the weird frontier, for movies, was Tremors. Least til the 4th one when they went full tilt.

I think my first weird western was the Deadlands RPG, which came out around the time The Adventures of Brisco County, Jr. was on (the copy of the game book I had even had a forward from Bruce Campbell, so for me a cool cross promotion), and aside from The Gunslinger I hadn't seen much of the genre until the somewhat recent explosion of authors writing weird westerns.
I'm glad it's becoming a bigger thing. And much more organically than steampunk's explosion a few years ago.




Hands down favorite is a tie for me. The Dark Tower series set me on the path and holds me tight years later. Then there's the Merkabah Ridr series by Edward M. Erdelac. It doesn't hurt that I became friends with Ed and he's a super cool dude either but his series is ridiculously good. I've joked that I'm his hype man haha.

And hey, if you wanna go the extra mile, you could check out tthe kickstarter for my book on my profile.
I still got 12 hours!
I still got 12 hours!

I think my first Weird Western was the film Timerider: The Adventure of Lyle Swann followed by Clint Eastwood's High Plains Drifter and Pale Rider, and Stephen King's first three Dark Tower novels. But it wasn't until I read Joe Lansdale's and Tim Truman's Jonah Hex: Two-Gun Mojo comic book that I really embraced the genre and tried my hand at writing my own weird western stories.
I look forward to chatting about Weird Westerns, sharing recommendations, and discussing ways we can raise the profile of this fun genre. :-)



Books mentioned in this topic
The Gunslinger (other topics)The Werewolf Pack (other topics)
The Werewolf Pack (other topics)
Lonesome Dove (other topics)
The Guns of Shadow Valley (other topics)
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The answer might depend on how you define weird western. I read The Gunslinger in high school, definitely weird, but long before that I was watching spaghetti westerns. I argue that those movies are treading into weird western territory. Staying with Clint, there's the obvious vengeful spirit of High Plains Drifter, and the implied vengeful spirit of Pale Rider. But even before all of those I remember a great Twilight Zone episode called The Grave with Lee Marvin. It was short and sweet like most Twilight Zones. But it had a great creepy feel and a spooky payoff. I reckon I was eight or nine the first time I saw that one. What about the rest of you lot?