The Rider of Lost Creek

by Louis L'Amour

Kilkenny (1)

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Lance Kilkenny's gun is believed to be the fastest in the West, but once the gunfight is over, he disappears. Most folks don't even know what he looks like. Some time back, Mort Davis saved Kilkenny's life after he was shot up. Now Davis needs Kilkenny's help. He has filed a claim on a water hole near Lost Creek in the live oak country. The district is dominated by two wealthy cattlemen, Webb Steele and Chet Lord, each one claiming for himself the water hole that Davis occupies. Beautiful show more Nita Riordan owns the local saloon, and between her charms and the feuding ranchers, Lance Kilkenny has his work cut out for him. If he doesn't watch his step, he'll pay the debt he owes with his own blood. show less

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7 reviews
I can finally say that I've read a Louis L'Amour book! This wasn't a bad western, but I haven't read too much in the genre to compare it to. This standalone follows Lance Kilkenny as he comes into town to hep a friend out. He's known as the fastest gunmen in the west, but most don't even know what he looks like because he never stays in any place long. He discovers that his friend Mort Davis needs help securing a waterhole from two wealthy cattleman who are claiming it as their own. As the bodies start piling up, it appears that a full on range war is about to engulf the whole territory, if only Kilkenny could keep his mind on work and his thoughts off the local saloon owner.Fast paced and quick, there is a small mystery that gives show more resolved in the end and lots of gunfights and stolen kisses from pretty women. Forgettable but fun. show less
This is the first of the Kilkenny trilogy, and in it we are treated to something more than standard Western fare. Lance Kilkenny is a gunfighter by necessity, not choice, and when he comes to the aid of a friend caught in the beginnings of a range war he's expecting to get out as quickly as possible. But a mystery behind a series of murders complicates things, as well as the beautiful Nita..
½
Lance Kilkenny never wanted a reputation as a gunfighter, but it was thrust upon him by his own skill and circumstances in which he kept emerging as the last man standing. He tries to live a quiet life, but when his friend Mort Davis gets caught in the middle of a range war, Kilkenny isn't about to walk away. Mort saved his life once, and Kilkenny doesn't desert his friends.

It's not great prose (e.g. L'Amour has the maddening habit of calling his protagonist both "Lance" and "Kilkenny," sometimes a paragraph apart). The story is simple and trope-filled. The primary antagonist might as well be wearing a black hat; I knew who he was many pages before Kilkenny figures it out. However, raised on John Wayne (both the 1930s B-movies and the show more big-studio classics), I'm a lifelong sucker for every last one of these tropes. Kilkenny is a tough, honorable man of the West with a hint of mysterious past, a careful way with words, a whole lot of survival competence, and a woman who'll be pining for him (presumably until Book 2). Looking forward to that one. show less
Wire is going up in Texas. Barbwire, and it'll mean a war. For small rancher Mort Davis it may spell the end of everything he's worked for. The big ranchers on either side are fixing to go to war - winner take all, including his property. He needs help, and Kilkenny owes him a favor....

One of my favorite L'Amour books as a kid, it reads a bit differently from an adult perspective but I still revisit it every now and then.
½
The second novel of the Kilkenny trilogy, highlighting a hero with lighting fast draw and the heart of a peacemaker and loyal friend.
This is the first book by Louis L'Amour that I read. It led to many, many more. I especially like the Sackett series.
Review "L’Amour is the kind of storyteller who makes the wolves come out of the woods to listen." -- _People_ Product Description Lance Kilkenny has a debt to pay, and he isn’t about to let the friend who saved his life go down in a range war. But when Kilkenny tries to stop the fighting, he finds there’s more at stake than land or wire. Whoever is stirring up trouble has big ideas for the Live Oak country—and an army of hired guns to back them up. Nita Riordan, the beautiful and fiery owner of the Apple Canyon Saloon, warns Lance that the mysterious man orchestrating the conflict wants him dead. Lance realizes that if he doesn’t watch his step, he’ll pay the debt he owes with his own blood.
½

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Born in Jamestown, North Dakota on March 22, 1908, Louis L'Amour's adventurous life could have been the subject of one of his novels. Striking out on his own in 1923, at age 15, L'Amour began a peripatetic existence, taking whatever jobs were available, from skinning dead cattle to being a sailor. L'Amour knew early in life that he wanted to be a show more writer, and the experiences of those years serve as background for some of his later fiction. During the 1930s he published short stories and poetry; his career was interrupted by army service in World War II. After the war, L'Amour began writing for western pulp magazines and wrote several books in the Hopalong Cassidy series using the pseudonym Tex Burns. His first novel, Westward the Tide (1950), serves as an example of L'Amour's frontier fiction, for it is an action-packed adventure story containing the themes and motifs that he uses throughout his career. His fascination with history and his belief in the inevitability of manifest destiny are clear. Also present and typical of L'Amour's work are the strong, capable, beautiful heroine who is immediately attracted to the equally capable hero; a clear moral split between good and evil; reflections on the Native Americans, whose land and ways of life are being disrupted; and a happy ending. Although his work is somewhat less violent than that of other western writers, L'Amour's novels all contain their fair share of action, usually in the form of gunfights or fistfights. L'Amour's major contribution to the western genre is his attempt to create, in 40 or more books, the stories of three families whose histories intertwine as the generations advance across the American frontier. The novels of the Irish Chantry, English Sackett, and French Talon families are L'Amour's most ambitious project, and sadly were left unfinished at his death. Although L'Amour did not complete all of the novels, enough of the series exists to demonstrate his vision. L'Amour's strongest attribute is his ability to tell a compelling story; readers do not mind if the story is similar to one they have read before, for in the telling, L'Amour adds enough small twists of plot and detail to make it worth the reader's while. L'Amour fans also enjoy the bits of information he includes about everything from wilderness survival skills to finding the right person to marry. These lessons give readers the sense that they are getting their money's worth, that there is more to a L'Amour novel than sheer escapism. With over 200 million copies of his books in print worldwide, L'Amour must be counted as one of the most influential writers of westerns in this century. He died from lung cancer on June 10, 1988. (Bowker Author Biography) Louis L'Amour, truly America's favorite storyteller, was the first fiction writer ever to receive the Congressional Gold Medal from the United States Congress in honor of his life's work, & was also awarded the Medal of Freedom. There are over 260 million copies of his books in print worldwide. (Publisher Provided) show less

Series

Common Knowledge

Original publication date
1976
People/Characters
Lance Kilkenny
Epigraph
[None]
Dedication
[None]
First words
A lone cowhand riding a hard-pressed horse stepped down from the saddle and whipped the dust from his hat by a few stiff blows against his chaps.
Last words
(Click to show. Warning: May contain spoilers.)A long way ahead the trail curved into the mountains.
Disambiguation notice
This is a collection containing The Rider of Ruby Hills; Showdown Trail; A Man Called Trent; and The Trail to Peach Meadow Canyon. This has also been published in other formats.

Classifications

Genres
Fiction and Literature, Historical Fiction
DDC/MDS
813.52Literature & rhetoricAmerican literature in EnglishAmerican fiction in English1900-19991900-1945
LCC
PS3523 .A446 .R53Language and LiteratureAmerican literatureAmerican literatureIndividual authors1900-1960
BISAC

Statistics

Members
731
Popularity
38,360
Reviews
7
Rating
½ (3.62)
Languages
English, German, Norwegian (Bokmål)
Media
Paper, Audiobook, Ebook
ISBNs
36
ASINs
11