Walking Wolf a/k/a Billy Skillet is the orphaned son of white settlers, found as an infant and raised to be a proud Comanche warrior. He also happens to be a werewolf. When he loses control of his darker nature and ends up killing the woman he loves and his best friend, Walking Wolf heads out into the White Man's world to learn more about who--and what--he is. This is his story of self-discovery as he travels the Old West, crossing the paths of a couple of deranged serial killers, a traveling medicine show, a vampire gunslinger, even a fellow werewolf, as well as such historical figures as Quanah Parker and Sitting Bull. But all the dangers he finds himself facing, none is as deadly as the bounty hunter known as Witchfinder Jones, who holds the secret of Walking Wolf's origins. Award-winning novelist Nancy A. Collins, author of Sunglasses After Dark, spins a tale of strange doings on the high plains, in the vein of Abraham Lincoln: Vampire Hunter.
Nancy A. Collins (born 10 September 1959) is a United States horror fiction writer best known for her series of vampire novels featuring her character Sonja Blue. Collins has also written for comic books, including the Swamp Thing series, Jason Vs. Leatherface, Predator: Hell Come A Walkin and her own one-shot Dhampire: Stillborn.
Collins was born in McGehee, Arkansas, United States. She lived in New Orleans, Louisiana in the 1980s; after time in New York City and Atlanta, Georgia she settled in Wilmington, North Carolina in the late 2000s.
Collins has written twenty novels since 1989, many of which refer to and directly include races of creatures the author calls Pretenders, monsters from myth and legend passing as human to better hunt their prey.
Collins has also written a number of highly acclaimed Southern Gothic short stories and novellas, most of which are set in Seven Devils, Arkansas, a highly fictionalized version of her hometown.
Most recently, she has focused her attention onto the Golgotham urban fantasy series,published by Penguin. Golgotham is the 'supernatural' ghetto of New York City, where creatures from myth and folklore--including witches,shapeshifters,leprechauns and centaurs--live and work in uneasy alliance with mankind.
This is like Candide by way of Little Big Man with plenty of appearances from historical figures and gruesome werewolf violence sprinkled throughout. Subverts the "magical indian" trope as our werewolf is the son of a white settler who is adopted into the Comanche Nation as a child, but Collins does frequently misuse the word "skinwalker" so it's a wash. Especially loved the bit where Walking Wolf buggers Custer's corpse.
I read this in one sitting one summer while on vacation with my cousins. It's a fantastic book that covers the story of a very, very old werewolf, who after a long life filled with startling highs and lows, decides to recount his tale to a passing stranger before he finally dies. It's a tale which intersperses history with the fantastic, and covers what it's like to carry the burden of the Vagrr.
It's not for the feint of heart however. It is rife with death, gore, madness, and rape. Being Vargr is difficult and it is as much a curse as it is a boon. It's hard to find on its own these days, but Nancy Collins did include it in a recent compilation of weird west tales, in a book called Dead Man's Hand.
What's not to like about a Native American werewolf story set in the 19th century American West? Well, I did like it some. The hero, Billy Skillet, is likeable and pretty well drawn. The horror elements are not too graphic yet still a bit out-there. There's a lot of quirky humor in the book. On the other hand, the book should have been about 50 pages longer. It seems short, and I wanted more detail on some of the other characters and a little more suspense in the conflict between Billy and the hunter who is after him. There's also one stretch where the author describes some of the historical detail leading up to the Wounded Knee massacre in 1890, and the novel's voice shifts from folksy to more academic. That was a bit jarring. The text could have used a little more editing, because there were a few typos that never should have seen the light of day. Overall, I enjoyed the book with some reservations. Readers who like alternative takes on the werewolf theme may well like Walking Wolf.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
I've been in a Yellowstone frame of mind for the last three months. Apart from the fact that, as far as I know, there are no werewolves on the ranch or reservation Walking Wolf's story is part of the history of the West. Then there's the werewolf aspect which was quite fascinating. I wish his story hadn't just stopped like it did. I could have read about every one of his adventures.
Interesting read. Its really a short story overlaid on a history of the Indian Wars of the late 1800's. Either would have been good. Together they seem less than the sum of the 2 parts. Still a worthwhile read, just not a significant work by Collins, who can be much better.
i read wild blood years ago, another Vargr novel, i enjoyed it immensely but my reading habits changed and i moved away from the genre. having stumbled onto this book ive thoroughly enjoyed stepping back into the authors universe.