An older Kelton western, "Llano River" (1966) has our protagonist, a drifting cowboy named Dundee making his way across 1880's Texas, hired by a cattleman named John Titus to investigate who is stealing his cows and where they are being sold. The rustling operation is likely being run by an old bandit named Blue Roan Hardesty, so Dundee wanders the area looking at brands and matching them up with local operations to find where Titus' stock is being moved.
Dundee is a smart western character, a middle-aged cowboy getting past the point where he should have a real money stake but has instead been living day-to-day his entire working life. While he realizes he might need to finally change his ways, his cantankerous stubborn nature and commitment to doing things his way make real self-reflection impossible. Other characters in "Llano River" are well-written and interesting: the nobly bad Blue Roan, the immature Son Titus, the independent rancher Warren McCown and his beautiful sister Miss Millie, the tough broad Katy Long, and the Karnes bullies.
Verdict: A short western adventure with a real twist and a great ending. When I read Kelton westerns (this is my 15th), they fall into two distinct groups: the bad ones are overwhelmingly predictable, stereotypical, and one-note while the good ones are more authentic, surprising, and fun. This is a good one.
Jeff's Rating: 4 / 5 (Very Good)
movie rating if made into a movie: PG-13