Weird Westerns discussion
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I just started Dead Man's Hand. It's a new anthology of short Weird Western stories. Joe Lansdale starts it off with a Reverend Jedediah Mercer story. Pretty good stuff so far.
Eric wrote: "Blood Meridian is excellent, but don't expect that surrealism to fade any.
I just started Dead Man's Hand. It's a new anthology of short Weird Western stories. Joe Lansdale starts it off with a ..."
Honestly, the surrealism is what's keeping me interested.
I just started Dead Man's Hand. It's a new anthology of short Weird Western stories. Joe Lansdale starts it off with a ..."
Honestly, the surrealism is what's keeping me interested.

I just started Dead Man's Hand. It's a new anthology of short Weird Western stories. Joe Lansdale starts it off with a ..."
Just wrapped up Dead Man's Hand. Great stuff. My favorites were Sundown by Tobias S. Buckell and The Golden Age by Walter Jon Williams.

Most of the stories are very good. One actually drew me into an Orson Scott Card series I didn't know existed (Alvin Maker).
I thought I was gonna dive back into a book but I guess I'm in a low read cycle. Happens sometimes. I haven't anymore of Blood Meridian yet.

I'm reading George Macdonald Fraser's FLASHMAN AND THE REDSKINS. Book seven in his series about a cowardly and unscrupulous British cavalry officer bumbling his way through history and always somehow managing to come out looking good. This one has him heading west during the California gold rush fleeing a bounty in New Orleans with a wagon train full of prostitutes. It promised to involve The Battle Of The Little Bighorn at some point.
Slog indeed. I hit the chapter with the tree full of dead babies but haven't read anymore. It's just such aa hard read. I'll get it down in pieces though.
It's not even the dark and violence that's sloggin me, it's just his style. I got excited about the storm in the desert but that didn't last long. I promise though, dude, I will finish it.

Yeah, I haven't even gotten to the scene yet but that's also apparently where a lot of people stop reading.

I think it was from a chapter in "Sense and Sensibility".

Harry Flashman and the unreliable first-person narrator! Wow! I haven't read one of those in, well, longer than I like to admit.
If you like Flashman, try "The Luck of Barry Lyndon." Same kind of feel, but a bit more literary. Or just watch the Kubrick movie.


For some reason, that really cracked me up LOL
I actually just finished Heath Lowrance's "Hawthorne: Tales of a Weirder West". I really enjoyed it. I read as a break from reading the first Pax Britannia novel "Unnatural History".
I'm still slogging through Blood Meridian. This damn book is gonna take a year to read cause I can only pull enough of an attention span to read some of it a couple of times a month.

I was going to try that one, but after reading a sample and hearing what people are saying I think I'd have a tough time with it, not because of the content, just the writing style.
The writing style is awful. It's so boring and choppy and there's no quotation marks for dialogue or any other markers except for the occasional "he said." The only reason I'm gonna see it to completion is because Ed recommended it as one of his favorites. But even he said he hated it at first.

I'd love to see that but I feel like there'd have to be a lot of shit cut out. Like all the "he got up. He scratched his nose and walked over to the wall. It was a short wall. The wall was-"zzzzzzzzzzzz
That seems to be the case. Another friend said the last, I think it was 90 pages made it worth it.

That is probably the hardest read for me. I'm not asking for nothing but riveting story, but I need little things to keep me interested. But I guess that's part of the point of the book.
I've been on the fence about reading Blood Meridian at some point. I've heard it's really good, the great anti-western. I've also heard it isn't good, hit or miss like the rest of McCarthy's work. I'll get around to it at some point, but I'd like to know more of what you think as you go along.


Yooooo, slowly devouring The Whirlwind in the Thorn Tree. Y'all really need to get on this. SA's a great writer.





SO glad to hear the sequel does not suck. I'm really looking forward to getting hold of it. I enjoyed Six-Gun Tarot a aton.


I also got Skin Medicine a few months ago, I've been dying to get a copy of it and now I have one.
What are you reading? Or have recently read?