
Jake Logan
Author of The Jackson Hole Trouble
About the Author
Slocum Westerns are the longest running series of Westerns ever written, encompassing over 400 books, all of which are published under the pen name Jake Logan. The books have been written by a number of authors, and all feature John Slocum as the protagonist. John Slocum is a decent man who will do show more whatever it takes to survive what life in the Western Frontier throws at him. A Confederate soldier who lost his ancestral home to carpetbaggers after the Civil War and never went back, Slocum is as tough a gunfighter as they come. Slocum's adventures have taken him across most of the American West. He has been a soldier, slave, stage driver, bank robber, lawman, pioneer, cowboy, sheepherder, poor man, rich man, gambler, and drifter. (Bowker Author Biography) show less
Disambiguation Notice:
Jake Logan has been used as a house name by many different authors including Robert E. Vardeman
Series
Works by Jake Logan
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Gender
- n/a
- Disambiguation notice
- Jake Logan has been used as a house name by many different authors
including Robert E. Vardeman
Members
Reviews
I don’t know that Jake Logan books need reviews per se since they are all more-or-less the same; short, fast, mindless, entertaining reads.
However, because of the themes I felt this book was above an average Slocum, in particular the never-ending schemes to disenfranchise Native Americans as well as how the rich and powerful can (nearly) always manufacture enough reasons and fraudulent evidence to do what they want and take what they want whenever they want.
However, because of the themes I felt this book was above an average Slocum, in particular the never-ending schemes to disenfranchise Native Americans as well as how the rich and powerful can (nearly) always manufacture enough reasons and fraudulent evidence to do what they want and take what they want whenever they want.
Some of these books are fairly well written, and I took notice with this one because it had some of the best descriptors of Arizona weather that I have ever heard. Like:
"Rufus knew very well that in Arizona, it could thunder and pour on your right boot while your left stayed dry enough to light kindling."
[And.]
"There was no thunder yet, and Amos remembered that in Arizona, thunder and lightning didn't always mean rain."
"Sometimes it meant nothing, sometimes it meant hail - like the other show more night - and sometimes it meant wind so fierce that it snapped sapling tree trunks in half and literally drove people mad with its howl, battering sand and pelting twigs and cactus."
Rain is the most unpredictable thing in the desert, like one sunny Arizona summer day about 5 years ago when 100 people got swept away in a flash flood and 10 died. While at the same time, rain is so local that it can be pouring on one side of your house while the other is dry. Unbelievable, but true.
On the flipside, we have the inevitable Slocum is the best tracker on the planet, he would put the best, most skillful Apache to shame; he can dog a minnow across three oceans, a gnat through a blizzard, a rattler through the pitch black bowels of the earth... but then... he can't find a giant bleeding to death in a tiny, two horse town. show less
"Rufus knew very well that in Arizona, it could thunder and pour on your right boot while your left stayed dry enough to light kindling."
[And.]
"There was no thunder yet, and Amos remembered that in Arizona, thunder and lightning didn't always mean rain."
"Sometimes it meant nothing, sometimes it meant hail - like the other show more night - and sometimes it meant wind so fierce that it snapped sapling tree trunks in half and literally drove people mad with its howl, battering sand and pelting twigs and cactus."
Rain is the most unpredictable thing in the desert, like one sunny Arizona summer day about 5 years ago when 100 people got swept away in a flash flood and 10 died. While at the same time, rain is so local that it can be pouring on one side of your house while the other is dry. Unbelievable, but true.
On the flipside, we have the inevitable Slocum is the best tracker on the planet, he would put the best, most skillful Apache to shame; he can dog a minnow across three oceans, a gnat through a blizzard, a rattler through the pitch black bowels of the earth... but then... he can't find a giant bleeding to death in a tiny, two horse town. show less
Slocum is what Slocum is and these books generally don't warrant reviews because they are expected to be quick reading and mildly entertaining. That said, Slocum Gets Even is beyond ridiculous. Since I gave it a single star I thought I would write a few words as to why. My paperback clocks in at 185 pages, and the last, oh, ten pages are quite good, what you’d expect from a Jake Logan pulp western. The problem is that the previous 175 pages leading up to them are beyond ridiculous. I am show more not even sure the story itself was edited in the correct order as several times what was there was all wonky and didn’t follow; that too was weird. show less
I thought this was an anti-John Slocum, or far-too-stupid John Slocum to be a Slocum novel. And maybe this was an earlier Slocum book (No.5) and they hadn’t quite gotten his backstory down, but I thought in all the others I've read that he was originally from Georgia and in this one it is Arkansas. Sure he’s a man's man and so on, but it quickly didn't add up for me and I felt it was all around pretty bad.
The ending, however, was quite good and made the entire story make a whole lot more show more sense, but overall it just didn’t make up for the drudgery of the first 90% or so. show less
The ending, however, was quite good and made the entire story make a whole lot more show more sense, but overall it just didn’t make up for the drudgery of the first 90% or so. show less
You May Also Like
Associated Authors
Statistics
- Works
- 452
- Members
- 1,915
- Popularity
- #13,437
- Rating
- 2.7
- Reviews
- 5
- ISBNs
- 706
- Languages
- 2













