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THE FIRST LONE STAR NOVEL-PLUS THE LONGARM THAT STARTED IT ALL! Longarm and the Lone Star Legend When the biggest cattle baron in Texas is assassinated, the Feds send in U.S. Marshal Long. Longarm finds himself threatened by a conspiracy reaching from Washington to Japan, armed with a strange new weapon never seen before in the West. But Longarm finds allies in the unlikely duo of breathtaking beauty Jessica Starbuck and her mysterious protector Ki. Together, they're out for blood and show more justice...and Longarm is in for the time of his life! Lone Star on the Treachery Trail When the cartel murdered Jessie Starbuck's father, they left behind the seed of their own destruction- a young Western beauty with a deep hunger for vengeance. Now word has reached Jessie that the conspirators are rustling Starbuck cattle, hiring Starbuck ranchers, and buying up Starbuck land in a spectacular plot to win control of the West. Unless she and her partner Ki can "persuade" them to stop... show lessTags
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Longarm by Lou Cameron
I was surprised, reading the first book in the series that it didn't feel like an introductory book. The character of Deputy U.S. Marshal Custis Long (A.K.A. Longarm) emerges fully formed in the first chapter (or as fully formed as he's likely to get).
So the Longarm books are all about the plot then, rather than being about the growth of Marshal Long. That didn't give me a lot of hope as I admit the plot of the first book just didn't sound as interesting as the second book in the omnibus I read it in.
Longarm is sent out to the tiny town of Crooked Lance to fetch a prisoner, a cow thief captured by the town's 'vigilance committee'. Seems Long wasn't the first marshal dispatched to Crooked Lance. What happened to his show more predecessor is unknown.
Longarm does make it to Crooked Lance and finds he's in the middle of a mess. The prisoner is a nobody named Cotton Younger, but he may have ties to the James/Younger gang and could theoretically provide info on the whereabouts of Frank and Jesse James. Because of this Longarm isn't alone in wanting to bring Younger to justice...
I enjoyed the writing of this first book. I wish I could find a list of the different authors who wrote 'Tabor Evans' books, to give credit where credit is due (I did and I have). The author of this one knew his stuff. The writing was rich in incidental detail and made good use of Western idioms. Honestly, the narrative was a lot better than the fan-fiction level writing I was expecting out of what is basically a romance novel for men.
Also, this wasn't the blood'n'guts action-fest I thought it would be. It's really a mystery in the Old West. I'm not sure if that's a formula for the series or just how this first one was handled.
The dialog was a bit clumsier than the narration. I thought the 'Western accent' was laid on pretty thick with more 'Gawd's and 'durn's than you could shake a stick at. It did make the book fun to read through though.
This book is no classic, but it was lots of fun. show less
I was surprised, reading the first book in the series that it didn't feel like an introductory book. The character of Deputy U.S. Marshal Custis Long (A.K.A. Longarm) emerges fully formed in the first chapter (or as fully formed as he's likely to get).
So the Longarm books are all about the plot then, rather than being about the growth of Marshal Long. That didn't give me a lot of hope as I admit the plot of the first book just didn't sound as interesting as the second book in the omnibus I read it in.
Longarm is sent out to the tiny town of Crooked Lance to fetch a prisoner, a cow thief captured by the town's 'vigilance committee'. Seems Long wasn't the first marshal dispatched to Crooked Lance. What happened to his show more predecessor is unknown.
Longarm does make it to Crooked Lance and finds he's in the middle of a mess. The prisoner is a nobody named Cotton Younger, but he may have ties to the James/Younger gang and could theoretically provide info on the whereabouts of Frank and Jesse James. Because of this Longarm isn't alone in wanting to bring Younger to justice...
I enjoyed the writing of this first book. I wish I could find a list of the different authors who wrote 'Tabor Evans' books, to give credit where credit is due (I did and I have). The author of this one knew his stuff. The writing was rich in incidental detail and made good use of Western idioms. Honestly, the narrative was a lot better than the fan-fiction level writing I was expecting out of what is basically a romance novel for men.
Also, this wasn't the blood'n'guts action-fest I thought it would be. It's really a mystery in the Old West. I'm not sure if that's a formula for the series or just how this first one was handled.
The dialog was a bit clumsier than the narration. I thought the 'Western accent' was laid on pretty thick with more 'Gawd's and 'durn's than you could shake a stick at. It did make the book fun to read through though.
This book is no classic, but it was lots of fun. show less
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Tabor Evans is a house-name. The popular western series Longarm has been written by numerous Western authors who have published books using their own names and won Spur Awards. (Bowker Author Biography)
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- Longarm
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