Emerging from a gateway into the snowy barrens of the Colorado Rockies, Ryan Cawdor and his warrior group are forced to strike a deal for survival. This part of white hell is controlled by Baron Nelson, a grief-ridden widower burning for vengeance against the hired killers who murdered his boy.
Not far from Nelson's barony lies Yuma, a nasty hellhole every badman in the Rockies calls home. Ryan, Doc and J.B. Dix begin a perilous journey across desolate mountains to Yuma to capture and deliver the boy's killers back to the baron. The odds are not good: if the mutant grizzlies and roving marauders don't get them, the sadistic guntoughs in Yuma will. In the Deathlands, survival is a gamble. Death is the only sure bet.
If you've read the rest to the series, you've read this too as it follows the same cut and paste plot of the others.
Group arrives somewhere, they venture out, enter a ville, gunfight ensues, they return to redoubt.
There is an interesting side plot with a whole separate character in a different location but it barely gets a mention.
One pet peeve of mine for the series is how everything is the "biggest" or "most" that Ryan/Chrisy/Doc had ever seen or experienced. Every damn book something is the foulest smelling thing someone has ever smelled or the tallest man someone has ever seen. Saying it every book kinda devalues it.
Aside from this there is nothing of note to differentiate this book from 15 or so other mediocre entries in the franchise thus far. If you liked them well enough you'll like this well enough.
In this story, Ryan Cawdor and his companions come across Baron Nelson in what used to be Colorado. Nelson wants revenge on a rival Baron who killed his son. Ryan has no choice but to go along with the Baron's will who says that if he and J.B. Dix do no return with the killers within 10 days he will keep Ryans' son as well as Mildred and Krysti as his "wives". What ensues is a story that resembles a western more than anything else. The new characters introduced are entertaining and I would be nice if the author were willing to keep them around for more than a single book. Also unlike other books in the series so far, this one ends in a cliffhanger. This is an entertaining book in the series and fans will find all of the action that they are used to.
Classic standard Deathlands, how I enjoy these trashy pulp audiobooks. Apparently, according to one of the ads within the book, these are produced monthly. I'm not sure if that's the same series or one of the other multiple series that Graphic Audio produces, but that explains why they are so formulaic (and there are like 180+ of them). Doesn't matter, they are still very entertaining for an easy listening fast moving action audiobook.