Posts Tagged western short story

“Montana is Big” by Mark Hinton

16 March 2012

Ghost Town (copyright © m.a.h. hinton)

I found out yesterday that The Western Online has just published one more of my western short stories. This one is entitled “Montana is Big”. Regular readers of MontanaWriter may remember that The Western Online published another story of mine, “Box Canyon”, last May.

For those keeping score, right now on-line you can find the following short stories of mine.

I have also posted a .pdf of another short story, “Coffee Cup”, here at MontanaWriter. For a .pdf of that story, click here. “Coffee Cup” by Mark Hinton

Thank you to the folks at TheWesternOnline.com for liking my story enough to publish it.

You can find TheWesternOnline.com and my short story “Montana is Big” here.

Enjoy!

 

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Western Writer: Les Savage, Jr.

12 February 2012
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This is the third installment in the Western Writers Series at MontanaWriter. Other writers in the series can be found at Western Writers Series.

Like fellow western noir writer H.A. DeRosso, Les Savage, Jr. does not, at the time of this posting, appear to have a Wikipedia article. It is more than a little interesting that two of the first three western writers I have chosen for the Western Writers Series do not yet have such articles. It certainly says something about the state of western noir and something about my reading tastes.

As is the case with De Rosso, what I know of Savage’s life is what I have read and  pieced together from various book introductions.

Les Savage, Jr. was born and raised in Los Angeles. He began writing at the age of 17 and sold his first story to Street & Smith’s Western Story magazine. He was a steady contributor to the pulp magazines for many years, writing close to 100 short-stories.

Les Savage Jr as a writer worked hard to bring realism and authenticity to his fiction. In the 1950s, this meant that his work was often heavily censored and reworked by editors and publishers that did not like his realistic depictions of  the various kinds of multi-cultural and non-traditional male-female relationships that would have been very common on the frontier. Most modern editors and publishers of his work have tried to restore his manuscripts back to their original forms.

Savage is a wonderful noir writer. His west is not the sun-lit hollywood backdrop of most of his contemporaries. It is a place of shadows and dark places where morally complex men and women live and fight and struggle. His work is often violent yet also has that touch of the poetic that is a feature of great noir fiction. That delicate balancing act between the brutal and beautiful seems to me to be one of the defining characteristics of noir fiction. To realistically portray life is to bump up against the beautiful, the brutal, and the banal. Savage portrays it all well.

As a western writer, his work has that essential quality of the mythic or iconic that is part of every true western. As has been said before on MontanaWriter, westerns are the essential American myth. The great challenge for the western noir writer, indeed any western writer, is to balance realism and myth. This balance may be one of the most difficult challenges for a writer of American Fiction to undertake. Yet when it is pulled off well, as Savage often does, it remains one of the most satisfying reading experiences you can ever have.

Les Savage, Jr. who suffered from diabetes died at St. Johns Hospital in Santa Monica, California on May 26, 1958, at the age of 35. In his short life he wrote novels, a few hollywood screenplays, and short stories. Some of his work is available again electronically as well as in reprints, most redacted to reflect his original intent. He may be little known but he is not, thankfully, completely lost to us… yet.

 

Les Savage Jr. Partial Bibliography

     * The Bloody Quarter [Nov 1999]
     * The Cavan Breed [June 2003]
     * Coffin Gap [May 1997]
     * Copper Bluffs [Jan 1999]
     * Danger Rides the River [Aug 2002]
     * The Devil's Corral [Jan 2003]
     * Fire Dance at Spider Rock [Nov 1995]
     * Gambler's Row [Feb 2002]
     * Hangtown
     * In the Land of Little Sticks: North-Western Stories [Aug 2000]
     * The Lash of Senorita Scorpion [July 1998]
     * The Legend of Senorita Scorpion [July 1996]
     * Medicine Wheel [Aug 1996]
     * Phantoms in the Night [Nov 1998]
     * The Return of of Senorita Scorpion: A Western Trio [July 1997]
     * The Shadow in Renegade Basin: A Western Trio [June 2001]
     * Silver Street Woman [July 1995]
     * Table Rock [Nov 1993]
     * The Trail
     * Treasure of the Brasada [Jan 2000]
     * West of Laramie [May 2003]
(source: Ultimate Western Database)
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Western Writer: H.A. DeRosso

31 January 2012

This is the second installment in the Western Writers Series at MontanaWriter. Other writers in the series can be found at Western Writers Series.

There is currently no Wikipedia article for H.A. DeRosso. Because he is my favorite of all western writers, this has led me to consider undertaking the task myself. What I know though about DeRosso’s biography is limited to what I have read in Bill Pronzini’s excellent introductions to volumes of DeRosso novels and short stories that he has edited. (Bill Pronzini does have a Wikipedia article, by the way.)  I can only  assume that the information Pronzini provides is accurate.

H. A. DeRosso (1917-60) lived and wrote in Hurley, Wisconsin, which is just over the state line from the Upper Pennisula of Michigan. The UP of Michigan is as close to the west as the Midwest can ever be. Pronzini tells us that from the beginning of his writing career DeRosso struggled to be published, apparently sending out 79 manuscripts before the Street & Smith’s Western Story Magazine picked up his first story in 1941.

DeRosso’s struggles with getting published were part learning his craft and marketplace. But it was also the inevitable outcome for someone trying to bring the moral ambiguity of noir into the sunny genre of the western. The work of fellow western writers like Noel M. Loomis and Les Savage, Jr. and four years of war and the Holocaust made Post-World War II America more open to more realistic fiction.  From 1945 until his death by suicide in 1960, DeRosso was a professional writer.

DeRosso is the high priest of the western noir story. No one does it better. As I have said elsewhere at MontanaWriter ( in my review of DeRosso’s masterpiece, .44) his style is classic noir: ” austere, hard-boiled, grim, lonely and yet,… poetic at times.” To further quote myself (always a risky thing):

There are, admittedly, more realistic western writers and much more historically accurate ones. And yet with the possible exception of Cormac McCarthy there are no western writers that are as satisfying as DeRosso in the end.

DeRosso is satisfying because his work is so mythic. Westerns, after all, are suppose to be mythic. To quote Maxwell Scott in The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance, “This is the West, sir. When the legend becomes fact, print the legend.”

DeRosso’s novels and short story collections can easily be found at Amazon.com or at Abe.com. As mentioned above, most of his short story collections have been edited by Bill Pronzini. I have been able to compare the pulp version originals of a few stories with Pronzini’s later edits. As far as I can see he tightened those stories up well. I can only assume that is the case with all the stories he touched.

Also, in the late 1990s and early 2000s, British publisher Anthony Rowe Ltd., reprinted in England a number of DeRosso’s novels under the Gunsmoke imprint in fine library-bound editions. I have have a number of these.

The current copyright holder for DeRosso who was a life-long bachelor is Marquette General Hospital. It seems to me that it would be in the hospital’s best interest to make sure there was a Wikipedia article on DeRosso and  to do more to get his work recognized here in the United States. It would certainly be in the best interest of all who really love westerns. Maybe I will do it after all.

H.A. DeRosso Partial Bibliography

  • .44
  • End of the Gun
  • The Gun Trail
  • The Dark Brand
  • Tracks in the Sand (edited by Bill Pronzini)
  • Riders of the Shadowlands: Western Stories (edited by Bill Pronzini)
  • Under the Burning Sun (Short Stories)
  • Those Bloody Bells of Hell (Short Stories)
H. A. DeRosso’s pulp magazine bibliography, from the Fictionmags Index: 
* Back Track, (ss) Ranch Romances Mar #2 1956
* Bad Blood, (ss) Western Short Stories Sep 1955
* Bad Girl on His Backtrail, (nv) Best Western Jun 1955
* Badman’s Heritage, (ss) Max Brand’s Western Magazine Sep 1953
* Bet on the Wild Heart, (ss) Star Western Sep 1949
* The Black Guns, (ss) Argosy May 1958
* Black Kill in the Desolados, (na) 3-Book Western May 1957
* Blind Gunman’s Bluff, (ss) .44 Western Magazine Jan 1942
* Blood and Texas on His Backtrail, (ss) Complete Western Book Magazine Feb 1943
* Bloody Valley!, (na) .44 Western Magazine Jan 1949
* Camp of No Return, (ss) Dime Western Magazine Jul 1950
* Cattle Queen’s Hired Killer, (ss) Star Western Aug 1951
* The Cold Running Iron, (nv) 10 Story Western Magazine Nov 1948
* The Curse of Cordoba, (na) Complete Western Book Magazine Oct 1950
* Curse of the Seven Corpses, (ss) Western Aces Jul 1945
* Damned by the Dark Trails, (ss) Western Short Stories May 1942
* Dead Man’s Luck, (ss) Fifteen Western Tales Sep 1953
Western Tales Magazine (UK) #19 1954
* Dead Man’s Trail, (ss) New Western Magazine Aug 1954
* Death Stacks the Deck, (ss) Street & Smith’s Western Story Jan 3 1942
* Desert Deadline, (ss) New Western Magazine Aug 1949
* The Devil of Dodge, (ss) .44 Western Magazine Mar 1943
* Fear in the Saddle, (ss) Zane Grey’s Western Magazine Sep 1952
* Flight from the Desert, (ss) Mammoth Western Sep 1949
Mammoth Western Quarterly Win 1949
* For Love or Money, (ss) Texas Rangers Sep 1952; it was the last time she’d make a fool of him.
* A .44 Is My Best Friend, (ss) Western Short Stories Nov 1949
* The Girl Who Practised Aklat, (nv) Marvel Science Stories Feb 1951
Marvel Science Stories (UK) Jun 1951
* Greased Holster Heritage, (ss) Western Short Stories Feb 1942
Western Novel and Short Stories Jan 1950
* Gun Cry, (ss) Ranch Romances May #1 1950
* Gun Dust, (ss) Leading Western Feb 1948
* Gun Hand, (ss) Texas Rangers Feb 1956
* The Gun Rider, (ss) Ranch Romances Nov #1 1955
* Gun-Ace in the Hole, (ss) Western Trails v36 #1 1942
* Gun-Call!, (nv) .44 Western Magazine Nov 1952
* The Gunfighter, (ss) Argosy Aug 1957
* The Gunman and the Girl, (ss) Fifteen Western Tales Mar 1953
* Guns of Greed, (na) Three Western Novels Magazine Jul 1949
* Gunsmoke in Your Eyes, (ss) .44 Western Magazine Apr 1947
* Hangtree Kid, (nv) Max Brand’s Western Magazine Nov 1953
Max Brand’s Western Magazine (UK) #16 1953
* Haunted Spurs, (nv) Texas Rangers Apr 1953
* Hide-Away, (ss) Triple Detective Sum 1954
* Homicide Saddle, (ss) Western Trails Jan 1944
* Horse Crazy, (ss) Ace-High Western Stories Mar 1942
* Horse Thief [Pete Neighbors], (ss) Fighting Western Oct 1948
* I Ride Alone, (ss) Texas Rangers Jan 1952
* I Trust My Trigger, (na) Complete Western Book Magazine Dec 1950
* Iron Horse Rustler, (ss) Western Aces Oct 1943
* Jack o’Diamonds, (ss) .44 Western Magazine Jan 1948
* Kill One Kill Two, (ss) Manhunt Aug 1960
* Killer, (nv) Gunsmoke Aug 1953
Giant Gunsmoke v1 #1 1953
* Killers Also Die [Dan Drummond], (ss) The Masked Rider Western Magazine Jan 1944
Popular Western (Canada) Oct 1944
Hopalong Cassidy’s Western Magazine Fll 1950
* The Killing Samaritan, (ss) Star Western May 1948
* Last Manhunt, (nv) Dime Western Magazine Sep 1947
* The Last Sleep, (ss) Western Fiction Magazine Jul/Aug 1970
* The Long and Crooked Trail, (nv) 5 Western Novels Magazine Apr 1952
* Long Rope – Short Prayer! [Red Harrison], (nv) 10 Story Western Magazine Apr 1953
* The Longest Ride, (ss) Short Stories Nov 1956
* Look for a Blue Horse, (ss) Zane Grey’s Western Magazine Dec 1952
* Man-Breaker!, (nv) Max Brand’s Western Magazine Aug 1954
* Mankiller!, (ss) 10 Story Western Magazine Feb 1953
* Massacre Mountain, (na) Western Action Mar 1956
* My Lady Weeps, (ss) Pursuit Detective Story Magazine Jan 1955
Pursuit—The Phantom Mystery Magazine #8 1955
* My Saddle and My Gun, (ss) Fifteen Western Tales Sep 1943
* Never Sell Your Saddle!, (ss) Fifteen Western Tales Jan 1953
* Next Issue (Illustrated) (with [Editor]), (ia) 10 Story Western Magazine Feb 1953
* No Man’s Gun, (ss) Max Brand’s Western Magazine May 1954
* One Kiss… One Grave, (nv) Mammoth Western Mar 1950
* Only the Gun-Swift, (ss) Texas Rangers Aug 1948
Texas Rangers (UK) May 1949
* Racetrack Retribution, (ss) Street & Smith’s Western Story Aug 15 1942
* Raw-Red Reunion, (ss) Western Short Stories Apr 1949
* Red Brand of the 88 Iron, (n.) Western Novel and Short Stories Jun 1951
* The Red Snow, (nv) Pursuit Detective Story Magazine Mar 1954
Verdict (UK) Aug 1954
* The Return of the Arapaho Kid, (ss) Argosy Sep 1958
* Ride a Dead Horse, (ss) Western Short Stories Oct, Dec 1948
* Ride the Dark Trail, (ss) Western Short Stories Dec 1951
* Rider from Hell, (ss) 10 Story Western Magazine Aug 1945
* The Rider from Wind River, (nv) New Western Magazine Mar 1953
* Rimfire, (ss) Popular Western Sep 1952
* She Had Red Lips, He Had a Six-Gun, (na) Best Western Jun 1956
* Shoot the Man Down, (ss) Lariat Story Magazine Nov 1947
* Silent Are the Guns, (ss) Fifteen Western Tales Dec 1942
* Six-Gun Saddlemates, (ss) Street & Smith’s Western Story Jul 19 1941
* Song of Death, (ss) Thrilling Ranch Stories Sum 1953
* Song of the .45, (ss) Six-Gun Western Sep 1948
* Stacked Deck, (ss) The Rio Kid Western Jan 1952
* Stage to Destiny, (ss) Street & Smith’s Western Story Jan 16 1943
* Stakeout, (ss) Mystery Tales Aug 1959
* Sundown Passes Through, (ss) Dime Western Magazine Sep 1941
* This Bullet Has Your Name on It!, (ss) Western Short Stories Aug 1942
* Those Bloody Bells of Hell!, (nv) Dime Western Magazine Feb 1948
* The Tinhorn Fills His Hand, (ss) New Western Magazine May 1944
* Tinhorn Heritage [Lonnie Madden], (ss) Fighting Western Jan 1946
* The Town Two Guns Couldn’t Tame, (ss) Complete Western Book Magazine Dec 1941
* Track of Fear, (ss) Web Detective Stories May 1961
* Trail into Fury, (ss) Western Short Stories Jan 1950
Western Short Stories (UK) Jan 1950
* Trigger Touchy, (ss) Street & Smith’s Western Story Oct 31 1942
* Trigger Treachery, (ss) Street & Smith’s Western Story Nov 21 1942
* The Troubled Gun, (ss) 2-Gun Western Feb 1954
* Two Bullets to Hell, (nv) New Western Magazine Mar 1954
* Under the Burning Sky, (sl) Colliers May 30, Jun 6 1953
* The Unmarked Grave, (ss) Ranch Romances Feb 1961
* Waiting in the Moonlight, (ss) Texas Rangers Oct 1955; Never before had Tom Brady killed like this—for money.
* Way of a Gunman, (na) Western Novel and Short Stories Apr 1935
* The Ways of Vengeance, (ss) Texas Rangers Jun 1956
* The Wayward Gun, (ss) Ranch Romances Nov #1 1952
* When Hell Hit Haystack Flats, (ss) Big-Book Western Magazine Apr 1948
* The Wide and Hungry Loop, (na) Complete Western Book Magazine Feb 1952
* The Wild Town That Couldn’t Be Tamed, (ss) Complete Western Book Magazine Aug 1942
* Witch, (ss) Ranch Romances Feb 1962
* Wrong Side, (ss) Complete Western Book Magazine Jun 1956

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“Cottonwood Death” voted favorite story

3 January 2012

Montana Noir (copyright © m.a.h. hinton)

I found out yesterday that my western noir short story, “Cottonwood Death,” was voted favorite December short story by the readers of Frontier Tales Magazine. To all who voted for my story, thank you.

I have been asked by a few readers, if I have other short stories in the works. I do. A few more western noir short stories I am polishing up and a few… others. I hope to have one or two ready in the next few weeks. I will keep the readers of MontanaWriter posted. And to all who have cared enough to ask, thank you for that as well.

The lot of the writer can be a lonely one. A lot of time alone, working on something that may or may not: ever see the light of day, ever amount to anything in the end, ever work as intended or imagined, ever be finshed, ever be enjoyed by any one at all. So to have some people say they enjoyed something I have written is gratifying.

A few people who have written have also asked me about the dark nature of my stories. I really have not yet figured out how best to respond to that question. One reader, who had taken time to also read some of my poems, said that it seemed to him like I save all the “light” for my poems and all the “darkness” for my short stories. Maybe poetry lends itself better to the language of grace and prose to the language of judgement. I do not know. I only know that I am trying to write the kind of stories I would most like to read.

Either way, thanks to all who take the time to read what I write. You can never know how much I truly appreciate it.

For those who may have missed  ”Cottonwood Death,” or would like to read it again, here is a link to Frontier Tales Magazine.

 

 

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“Cottonwood Death” by Mark Hinton

4 December 2011

My latest short story, a western entitled “Cottonwood Death”, has just been published in the December issue of Frontier Tales Magazine.

I remain convinced that westerns are not merely an anachronistic genre. While they may seem to belong to another time, and may have long ago ceased being big-sellers, the form is far from exhausted and offers a great many possibilities… especially the noir western.

The western is as close to mythology as we have in America. We do not have Olympian gods or faeries or Valhalla, what we have are cowboys and Indians and wilderness and great open spaces.  A pure “western” is mythology in every sense of that word.

Myths tell us about what is best and worst in ourselves and our world. They can inspire and remind us of what is most important… of what we should never forget. A people who forget their myths, who turn their backs on them, are easily lost. It is no coincidence that westerns were put on the shelf in our culture at the very time that America began to lose its way… began to diminish. We lost our mythology and we lost ourselves.

I am making no claims for my stories being mythology… yet. But I will say that mythic is what I aspire for them to one day be. That is the kind of western I would like to write… the kind of western I wish more people were trying to write… the kind of western I like to read.

Thank you to editor Duke Pennell for liking my story enough to publish it.

You can find Frontier Tales Magazine and my story “Cottonwood Death” here.

Enjoy!

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Western Noir Short Story: “Coffee Cup” by Mark Hinton

15 July 2011
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(copyright © m.a.h. hinton)

“The novelist with Christian concerns will find in modern life distortions which are repugnant to him, and his problem will be to make these appear as distortions to an audience which is used to seeing them as natural; and he may well be forced to take ever more violent means to get his vision across to this hostile audience. When you can assume that your audience holds the same beliefs you do, you can relax a little and use more normal ways of talking to it; when you have to assume that it does not, then you have to make your vision apparent by shock — to the hard of hearing you shout, and for the almost blind you draw large and startling figures.”  ~ Flannery O’Connor

I have posted my poems here but not any of my short stories.

Here is a Noir Western I wrote, called “Coffee Cup.” Because of its dark nature, I feel compelled to say a few words about the story and the nature of hardboiled fiction.

It seems to me that one of the things that distinguishes truly hardboiled fiction from merely genre fiction is that hardboiled fiction takes seriously the true cost of violence and death. Violence and death make victims of everyone who come into contact with them.

In your typical Agatha Christie-type novel, the main characters encounter death and violence and yet seem untouched by it all. They solve the crime and move on to the next death and murder, and the next, and the next. Never losing their humanity, seemingly untouched and unstained by the violence.

I have no time for such fiction. Violence, suffering, and death by definition challenge our humanity and change us. That is the kind of fiction I like to read… and the kind I want to write.

I hope you enjoy. If you enjoy it, please share it with others. If you do not like it, I am sorry. Stay tuned… you may like the next one better.

For the a .pdf of the story, click here. “Coffee Cup” by Mark Hinton

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“Box Canyon” by Mark Hinton

17 May 2011

www.thewesternonline.com

Regular readers of MontanaWriter know that I have been working to break my bad habit of writing something, sitting on it for awhile, then just throwing it away. As a marketing plan for a writer, it has not been a successful strategy.

Recently I decided to start sending a few things out instead of just sitting on them… and so I have. My short story “Box Canyon” is now available at TheWesternOnline.com. It is, as the title of the website indicates, a western story.

Westerns are, admittedly, anachronistic. At first glance they may seem to belong to another time. Yet as a writer I find myself fascinated with the possibilities and promises of the form… and I also enjoy writing them.

I have always loved westerns. They remain my favorite genre of both film and popular fiction. Westerns are what I find myself turning to when I am feeling lonesome or restless… when I am feeling a need to reconnect with my roots, with the best part of myself.

My original plan had been to put a number of my western and noir stories together in a separate volume entitled Montana Noir and publish it with Montana Poems on kindle. Recently I decided to go a different route and so started re-editing the stories and sending them out.

Thank you to the folks at TheWesternOnline.com for liking my story enough to publish it.

You can find TheWesternOnline.com and my short story “Box Canyon” here.

Enjoy!

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