Built on dreams, forged in blood--the town called Fury is home to the bravest pioneers to ever stake a claim in the American West. In the fourth book in this popular series, Marshal Jason Fury and Jonas Lynch realizes that some quarrels just can't be solved without one heck of a fight. Original.
William W. Johnstone is the #1 bestselling Western writer in America and the New York Times and USA Today bestselling author of hundreds of books, with over 50 million copies sold. Born in southern Missouri, he was raised with strong moral and family values by his minister father, and tutored by his schoolteacher mother. He left school at fifteen to work in a carnival and then as a deputy sheriff before serving in the army. He went on to become known as "the Greatest Western writer of the 21st Century." Visit him online at WilliamJohnstone.net.
The latest book in the series, there's not really much of a plot here. Things kind of meander along, sort of day-by-day life in the small Arizona town of Fury.
Town Marshall Jason Fury, the town is named after his father, conducts his business, dealing with a newly arrived man wanted for eight murders in California. He's not wanted in Arizona though and Jason finds he likes the man. And his explanation of the killings sounds logical: self defense.
But it brings bounty hunters and other types of killers that want him.
The Doctor deals with a sickly newborn girl, a man dying from cactus spines in his back, allowed to fester too long before the wagon train reached him, a deputy shot in a jail break, the murderer of the deputy, and the various other killers shot by Fury or a deputy Marshall sent down.
A priest wants to build a church, the town fathers a water tower. They want the same lot and Jason has to deal with that.
The school marms wedding to the deputy Marshall, his sister's to the new deputy, the man from California.
This book was ok. I have a feeling it was a different writer on this book than on the others in the series. Lack of resolution a love interest and just didn't end up the series well in my opinion .
Redemption, is the fourth and finally book in the A Town Called Fury Series. It's the continued story of a town in Arizona called Fury, named in honor of Jedediah Fury. His son Jason is the town Marshall and his daughter Jenny, helps teach school.
It's a decent read, you have the usually cast of characters, add a U.S. Marshall, a couple of Bounty Hunters, an innocent wanted man with a bounty, along with a vile wanted outlaw and you a good story.
It's a series that reads like much of the book, just like with books 1 thru 3, probably were written by William W. Johnstone and then finished off by a ghost writer.
Just a shame that it ends the series, verse continuing on one of the better series they've written since the death of William, seems easy enough to write and especially with the first two books rereleased as a omni book edition. The interest is their with readers.
Probably the most frustrating thing with his estate and Kensington Publishing who have continued on writing new books, adding J.A. Johnstone to them and it's hit or miss. They just keep churning out new series, several of them plainly sucked, a few were so bad that they quit them, and the even more pathetic rewrite of the Smoke Jensen story.
Thankful Chucky's written a few of the most recent series making it as close to William's writing as you'll ever get.
This is a delightful story. The main character is a 25 year old man who is the sheriff of the town named for his father. You can have real empathy for him and the other characters in the book. From the Jewish shopkeeper, to a good murderer who while accused in California of 8 murders is a good friend, to the ugliest dog in the West, to a mother cat. You laugh and cry and I was sorry when the story ended. It has to be one of the best Johnstone has written.
Final story about the western town of Fury. The trials and tribulations of marshal Jason Fury are further told. Gunslingers, a US marshal and another wagon train visit the ever growing town in this the final saga. People stay behind as the wagon train leaves, people die in normal waits and others are shot. Love blossoms for many.
Fury is growing and with it come outlaws. Jason Fury handles everything that the town folk throw at him. Toss in a few Indians as well. Book 4 of "A Town Called Fury".
Good story line, the first western I've ever read, enjoyed the characters very much. Read book 4 by mistake but ordered the other 3 in the series and will start from the beginning. Can't wait!