| Joseph A. West: Me and Johnny Blue | |||
The heroes of the story, two cowboys and blood brothers -- one black, one not -- manage to get into more trouble than one might imagine. The narrator says, "I got a stub of pencil and a stack of brown wrapping paper from Jack Ryan's hardware store, and I'll write it down plain and simple just the way I recollect it." But I suspect he embellishes the truth on several occasions, though that only adds to ambiance. Okay, I'll admit I chuckled so often that I forgot to note whether or not the plot developed in an organized and orderly fashion. I suspect it didn't, but I know I didn't care in the slightest. The characterization rated the highest marks, and the setting became another character. The diction and mood enhanced the sometimes bawdy, sometimes touching tale of two friends, two men of honor cowboy honor. Lean times and no work led them in strange directions, maybe into a little dishonesty, but in the end they still intend to search for their missing sister, the one sold into slavery and missing for years. If you value originality, humor, and wonderful storytelling -- which I do -- don't miss this book. It will surely become one of the great ones, a true classic. Patricia White Patricia White is the Sapphire Award-winning author of A Wizard Scorned. Her recent contemporary PS, I've Taken a Lover, is available from Lionhearted Books. The Wandering Troll , an electronic magazine, began serializing her novel Prophecy Be Damned in April 2000. Her latest, The Legend of Lejube Rogue, is now available at Crossroads Publishing . Click here to share your views.
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3, Issue 3.1 © 1998, 1999, 2000 by Crescent Blues, Inc.
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