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249 pages, Mass Market Paperback
First published January 1, 1991
While browsing through the bookstore years ago, the blurb on the cover of this novel caught my eye, "The best novel I read last year." The quote was from Stephen King, no less. When I saw that the author was Richard Matheson, I was very surprised since I primarily knew Matheson as a writer of horror. Westerns have not really been an element of my previous reading history but I decided to give it a try and, man, was I glad that I did! I now rate this novel as one of my top three all time favorites.
Matheson's approach is to take the traditional story of the life of a gunslinger in the old West and look at it from the inside out. The novel takes the form of a journal written by Clay Hauser from his beginning as a frightened soldier in the Civil War to his inevitable destiny in a small mining town. From outlaw to lawman (and sometimes back again) during this ten year period, Matheson does a wonderful job in depicting the deterioration of a potentially great man. I felt genuinely sad at the end of this powerful novel.
I've been recommending this novel throughout the Internet for years now, whenever I get the chance. I thought that people would have been more influenced towards reading more western themed books by the success of Lonesome Dove. (Another of my top three favorites, by the way.) People should stop being afraid to explore new avenues of literature. Because that's exactly what this novel is, Great Literature!!
(This review is a re-edit of one I did on Amazon years ago.)