Showing posts with label james j griffin. Show all posts
Showing posts with label james j griffin. Show all posts

Monday, November 11, 2013

Renewal of Faith by James J. Griffin in A WOLF CREEK CHRISTMAS #wester

Renew of Faith
a short story in
Wolf Creek, Book 9:

Romancing The West is pleased to present a double feature: Wolf Creek, Book 9, A Wolf Creek Christmas, and Wolf Creek Book 10, O Deadly Night.  Each volume contains six Christmas stories, all centering around Wolf Creek in 1871, written by award-winning western authors.  Today, RTW features western author and Texas Ranger artifact collector, James J. Griffin

James J. Griffin
About James

I’ve been a student of the West, and particularly the Texas Rangers, since I was a kid. I’ve also been a horseman most of my life, and enjoy nothing quite so much as getting into the saddle and riding out into the woods and hills for the day, just me and my horse. In Ben Tolliver, I’ve combined my love of horses and the Texas Rangers.

My other novels are all Texas Ranger tales. My stories are very traditional Westerns, with strong heroes who have good moral codes.

While I’m a native New Englander, and love this part of the country more than anywhere else in the world, I also love the West, and travel out there whenever I get the chance. I’ve got a good friend in retired Texas Ranger and Baylor professor Jim Huggins, who helps with my research. Other good friends in Texas are Karl Rehn and Penny Riggs, who lend me their expertise on weapons of the old West.  My extensive collection of Texas Ranger artifacts is now in the permanent collections of the Texas Ranger Hall of Fame and Museum in Waco.

For more information about myself and my books, visit my website.

James' story: Renewal of Faith

Texas-Ranger-turned-livery-owner Ben Tolliver and his son Danny get a very unexpected Christmas gift. Then they meet and befriend the new Catholic priest who has come to establish a mission at Wolf Creek, in time to perform Christmas Mass -- but Ben finds much of the town opposed to the father's presence. Ben is determined that the Mass will be held, if he has to fight a mob to see it done...

About Ben Tolliver

My character, Ben Tolliver, is semi-autobiographical, at least when it comes to his love of horses. Just like Ben, I believe that horses are God’s greatest creation, next to humankind, and sometimes I think that horses are greater. And as a lifelong Catholic, I was happy for the opportunity to bring the Catholic faith to the town of Wolf Creek.

Quite a few things happen to Ben during Christmas season of 1871. When Renewal of Faith begins, he is upset with his son, Danny, and his questions about church. Ben’s resentment against his late wife’s parents for hiding Danny from him finally boils over. Ben would just as soon spend Christmas alone with Danny and their horses, in fact he’d prefer it that way. I’m kind of like Ben in that way. Christmas used to be huge family event, but with my parents now gone, my sisters and their families in Florida or Virginia, except for two of my nieces, my brother usually gone to his partner Joanne’s family, I now usually end up spending Christmas alone, and I’ve learned I kind of enjoy it that way at this point in my life. I go to early Mass Christmas morning, then spend most of the day with my dog and horse, except for dinner at my niece’s and her husband’s. However, as Ben will discover, there’s nothing quite like having folks around at Christmas. It will take quite a few battles before he finally finds some of the inner peace that has been eluding him.

There’s also some interesting side stories in Renewal of Faith. We meet two new arrivals to Wolf Creek, Father Sean Flannery, who has been sent to establish a mission, and Katy McBride, a feisty Irish gal who sees right through Billy Below’s and Jimmy Spotted Owl’s stunts. Katy’s plans to establish a saloon right smack dab in the middle of the respectable part of town is bound to upset the proverbial applecart. It remains to be seen, but there could well be a romance in the future between Katy and…

You’ll need to read the story to find out whom.

What's new from James

Acclaimed author James J. Griffin, noted for his fine stories of the Texas Rangers, joins the West of the Big River stable with THE RANGER, a short novel featuring real-life Ranger Sergeant J.S. Turnbo. Tangling with rustlers, bank robbers, and road agents is all in a day's work for Turnbo as he fights to bring law and order to the area around Abilene and San Angelo, Texas, but solving a deadly mystery will put Turnbo's life in more danger than ever before. It'll take all of the Ranger's wits and gun-handling skills to keep him alive as he untangles the strands of a lethal conspiracy!

THE RANGER is a novel based on historical characters and situations in the bestselling West of the Big River series from Western Fictioneers. Don't miss any of these action-packed tales!




Wolf Creek Book 9: 

The Last Free Trapper 
by Jory Sherman
A Savior is Born 
by Meg Mims
That Time of Year 
by Jerry Guin
‘Twas the Fight before Christmas 
by Jacquie Rogers
A Kiowa Christmas Gift 
by Troy D. Smith
Renewal of Faith 
by James J. Griffin


Wolf Creek, Book 10: 

Sarah’s Christmas Miracle 
by Big Jim Williams
Irish Christmas at Wolf Creek 
by Charlie Steel
A Home for Christmas 
by Cheryl Pierson
The Angel Tree 
by Chuck Tyrell
The Spirit of Hogmanay 
by Clay More
O Deadly Night 
by Troy D. Smith



Sunday, July 7, 2013

James J. Griffin: New Beginnings (Wolf Creek 6: Hell on the Prairie) #western


New Beginnings
by James J. Griffin
A short story in
Hell on the Prairie
Wolf Creek: Book 6


This week Romancing The West features the July 2 release, Wolf Creek: Hell on the Prairie. It's an anthology of seven short stories, all featuring characters in or connected to the Wolf Creek series, and offering  in-depth understanding of your favorite Wolf Creek residents.  There'll be giveaways on each post, so please check back each day.

  • Monday: Troy Smith discusses his character, Marshal Sam Gardner, and his role in Wolf Creek.
  • Tuesday: In Drag Rider, Chuck Tyrell has some fun with Billy Below--how'd this character get his name?
  • Wednesday: Clay More tells us about doctoring in the Old West and in his story, The Oath, how Wolf Creek's Dr. Logan Munro deals with the conflicts his oath.
  • Thursday: Cheryl Pierson's story, It Takes a Man, gives us an in-depth look at Derrick McCain.
  • Friday: Jerry Guin tells us how his character, Quint Croy deals with his new job as a lawman, and how Asa Pepper ended up owning a bar in the rough part of Wolf Creek, called Dogleg City in Asa Pepper's Place.
  • Saturday: Jacquie Rogers penned a guest appearance by a special guest in her story, Muleskinners: Judge Not, that runs concurrent with Wolf Creek 1: Bloody Trail.
  • Sunday: In New Beginnings, James J. Griffin gives us insight into the past of the town's blacksmith, and how a surprise changes his life.

If you're not familiar with the Wolf Creek series, you're missing out! Written under the house name Ford Fargo (the house name for Western Fictioneers), each book is the collaboration of some of the best western writers in the business, steered by Troy Smith, who also writes two WC characters. Links to all the Wolf Creek books are at the end of this article, just above the contest announcement.  For more information on the story world, visit Wolf Creek, Kansas.

James J. Griffin
courtesy of Pat Johnson
RTW: Everyone in Wolf Creek has a secret, and Bill Torrance's secret was uncovered early on--he's really Ben Torrance. And a fascinating character he is! Today, we're treated to an interview with his creator, James J. Griffin. Tell us a little about yourself, please.

JG: I've been fascinated by the West, particularly the Texas Rangers, since I was a kid. I've traveled all over the western United States and Canada. My Texas Ranger novels are traditional westerns, and most are suitable for almost all ages. My extensive collection of Texas Ranger artifacts is now in the permanent collections of the Texas Ranger Hall of Fame and Museum in Waco.

Add caption
I've also been a lifelong horseman, and love nothing better than to climb in the saddle and spend hours out in the woods, just me and my horse.

While I love the West. I love my native New England, especially my adopted home state of New Hampshire, even more. Currently, I divide my time between Branford, Connecticut and Keene, New Hampshire.

RTW: We'd sure like to hear about your story.

JG: In New Beginnings, we learn much more about Ben Tolliver's background. There is much about Ben which he has not revealed, and an unexpected encounter with Edith Pettigrew, the widowed town busybody, will have unintended consequences and place Ben and Edith in extreme danger.

That's not the biggest surprise Ben will receive, however. When he rides back into Wolf Creek, there is an attorney waiting for him. An attorney who has a package which will change Ben's life forever.

RTW: What prompted you to write Westerns? What keeps you writing them?

JG: James Reasoner got me started. He asked me a few questions about horses for his Civil War Battle series, and wrote me into two of those books as a Texas Ranger. He kept encouraging me to try my hand at writing a western novel. Since I've always loved the West, and have enough knowledge about the Texas Rangers to be qualified as an amateur historian of the organization, it was only natural that I would write Texas Ranger novels.
Courtesy of Susanne Hall

As far as what keeps me writing westerns, it sure isn't the money. Although I do make some. I still have my day jobs. So I write for the love of the genre, and hope that in some small way I'm helping to keep it alive.

RTW: If you lived in 1871 Wolf Creek, Kansas, what would your job be and how well would you get along with your character, Ben Tolliver.

JG: I'd either be a deputy sheriff, a partner with Ben in his livery stable, or a horse breeder. I'd definitely be best friends with Ben, because of his love for horses. That part of the character is pretty much autobiographical. In Book One, Ben is more upset about the horses which get killed than the humans. If I were living through that attack in Wolf Creek, I'd feel the exact same way as Ben

RTW: What surprised you the most about Ben Tolliver? Are there more surprises coming in future Wolf Creek books?

JG: Can't say much without spoiling upcoming volumes, but what happens between Ben and Edith I never really saw coming, even as I was writing it. And boy, is there ever a surprise in Volume 8. Also a couple in Volume 9.

RTW: What would give Ben the ultimate happiness?

JG: Being able to live in peace with his horses and (can't say, will give too much away. Buy the books).

RTW: Please set up your excerpt for us.

JG: This is a bit of what we learn about Ben.

Excerpt from
New Beginnings
by James J. Griffin
a short story in
Hell on the Prairie
Wolf Creek, Book 6

Sure wish G.W. would stop pesterin' me about becomin' a deputy, he thought. Of course, he's right about a couple of things. I'm good when it comes to bein' a lawman, and I love the work. But it's cost me too much, and I'm not talkin' about the bullets I've taken. The law cost me Madelaine, then Pete. It's not gonna take anyone else from me.

A tear trickled down Ben's cheek. Madelaine, the woman he'd loved more than life itself, even more than Cholla. Madelaine, the fiery Scots-Irish-French woman he'd first met in San Antonio. Madelaine, with the emerald green eyes and blazing red hair, who had loved him with a passion as intense as that flaming hair, a love which he had returned with just as much passion. Madelaine, who had indeed seen him naked and swimming Cholla bareback across a lake, and who, when they returned, ripped off her own clothes and jumped up behind Ben, joining him as Cholla plunged back into the lake, her arms around Ben's waist and her full breasts pushed up against his back, clinging to him atop the powerfully swimming horse. Madelaine, who loved him without question... until he remained out on a Ranger patrol just a few days too long, and returned to find her gone.

Wolf Creek: Hell on the Prairie
Available in print, or ebook at
and soon at other online stores

RTW: Whew!  Now we'll all have to take cold showers. (fans self) Tell us about your other current releases.

JG: Right now I am writing a series of ten short stories for High Noon Press. They are under the title A Ranger Named Rowdy, A Texas Ranger Tim Bannon story. These are ebooks, available for Kindle, Nook, and so forth, and are also available as audio books. The first three books have been released, and the audio book of the first story is now available.

In August or September, The Ranger, my contribution to the West of the Big River Series, will be released by Western Fictioneers.

I've also got chapters in Volumes 8 and 9 of the Wolf Creek series, and have plans to do at least one more each of the Texas Ranger Jim Blawcyzk, Cody Halicek, and Sean Kennedy books.

RTW: Anything else you’d like to add?

JG: I want to say what a great experience it has been working with all the other contributors to the Wolf Creek series.

Contest!

I'll take the names of everyone who goes to my website email within three days of the posting of this article and leave me a message they would like to win one of my books. I'll choose one name at random to win a copy of my Jim Blawcyzk Texas Ranger novel Ranger's Revenge.

Sunday, April 21, 2013

Peacemaker Award Nominee: The Toys by James J. Griffin #western

Author James J. Griffin
Photo credit: Susanne Hall

The Toys
by 
James J. Griffin

Romancing The West is honored to feature nominees for the Peacemaker Awards this week.

The Peacemaker Awards are sponsored by the Western Fictioneers, a group of some of the most talented and prolific Western authors of our time.  On Friday, we showcased Peacemaker Lifetime Achievement Winner Robert Vaughan.  

Today, we're featuring James. J. Griffin.  His short story, The Toys, published in Six-guns and Slay Bells: A Creepy Cowboy Christmas, was nominated for Best Short Story.

About the story:
The Toys is based on actual events which took place during the Johnson County War in Wyoming in the 1890s. Two homesteaders were ambushed and shot in the back by an unknown gunman, who would have been in the employ of the Wyoming Stock Growers Association, the organization of large ranchers who wanted to drive out all the homesteaders in the region. 

One of the homesteaders, John Tisdale, was killed while on the way home with Christmas presents for his family. 

In The Toys, Tisdale is killed by a gunslinger named Harlan Stoddard. When Stoddard examines Tisdale's body, he notices several toys scattered about, including a doll which seems to be staring at him. Tisdale takes his rifle and blasts the doll's head to bits. Little did he know what that action would lead to.

The Toys is a short story done much as if Stephen King had written a Western. Tension builds as Stoddard is pursued, and attempts to flee Wyoming and his fate.

About the author:  
James J. Griffin is a lifelong horseman, western enthusiast, and amateur historian of the Texas Rangers. His extensive collection of Texas Ranger artifacts is now in the collections of the Texas Ranger Hall of Fame and Museum in Waco. Jim has written a series of Texas Ranger novels, traditional Westerns in the best sense of the term. His books are suitable for almost all ages. Jim is also a contributor to the Western Fictioneers Wolf Creek and West of the Big River series.

Learn more about Jim and his books at his website.

Congratulations for your nomination, Jim!

The Lifetime Achievement Peacemaker will be presented to Robert Vaughan

2013 BEST WESTERN NOVEL:

  • City of Rocks (Five Star Publishing — Cengage) by Michael Zimmer
  • Unbroke Horses (Goldminds Publishing, LLC) by D.B. Jackson
  • Apache Lawman (AmazonEncore) by Phil Dunlap
  • Wide Open (Berkley Publishing Group) by Larry Bjornson


2013 BEST WESTERN SHORT STORY:

  • Christmas Comes to Freedom Hill” (Christmas Campfire Companion — Port Yonder Press) by Troy Smith
  • Christmas For Evangeline” (Slay Bells and Six Guns — WF ) by C. Courtney Joyner
  • Keepers of Camelot” (Slay Bells and Six Guns — WF) by Cheryl Pierson
  • The Toys” (Slay Bells and Six Guns — WF) by James J. Griffin
  • Adeline” (Protectors: Stories to Benefit PROTECT — Goombah Gumbo Press ) by Wayne Dundee


2013 BEST WESTERN FIRST NOVEL:

  • High Stakes (Musa Publishing) by Chad Strong
  • Wide Open (Berkley Publishing Group) by Larry Bjornson
  • Red Lands Outlaw, the Ballad of Henry Starr (AWOC.com Publishing) by Phil Truman
  • Last Stand At Bitter Creek (Western Trail Blazer) by Tom Rizzo
  • Sipping Whiskey in a Shallow Grave (Sunbury Press) by Mark Mitten


Winners will be announced on June 1, 2013 

Friday, April 12, 2013

James J. Griffin: Death Stalks the Rangers #western


Death Stalks 
the Rangers
by James J. Griffin

When a Texas Ranger is murdered, his fellow Rangers will stop at nothing to find his killer! Lone Star lawmen Sean Kennedy and Levi Mallory follow a cold trail across Texas to track down the man who shot Ranger Thad Dutton, and neither vicious outlaws nor a ruthless town boss will keep them from settling the score for their fallen comrade. Acclaimed Western author James J. Griffin returns with another action-packed, gunsmoke-laced tale of the Texas Rangers with Death Stalks the Rangers.

Review:
James J. Griffin provides another exciting Western adventure in Death Stalks the Rangers, as new hero Sean Kennedy uses fast guns and fists, along with a keen intellect, to solve the mystery of a fellow Texas Ranger's murder. As always, Griffin gives the reader plenty of action, colorful characters, and a vivid sense of the Texas frontier.

Monday, March 18, 2013

#NewRelease James J. Griffin: Ranger's Revenge (Western Fictioneers) #western

Ranger's Revenge
by James J. Griffin

James J. Griffin brings back Texas Ranger Jim Blawcyzk in this book. Blawcyzk isn’t really working for the Texas Rangers this time, though. In fact, he winds up on the wrong side of the law with the Rangers after him for part of the book, because he takes off his badge and goes off on his own after the gang that attacked and possibly murdered his wife and son. As a result, Ranger's Revenge is a little grittier than Griffin’s earlier books, but it has the same fine action scenes, interesting settings, and welcome touches of humor.

Reviews:
Tough, gritty, poignant, and packed with action and emotion, Ranger's Revenge is James J. Griffin's best novel so far. The return of Texas Ranger Jim Blawcyzk is always welcome and he's in top form in this yarn that finds him tracking down the outlaws who attacked his family. Highly recommended for Western Fans and anyone who enjoys an exciting, well written story.
--James Reasoner, Author of the Wind River series, and numerous others.

Once again Jim Griffin has spun a tale of action and valor that will keep you riveted until the last word is read. Another true adventure of Ranger lore that gets better with each book.
--Texas Ranger Sergeant Jim Huggins of Company F

Jim Griffin knows his stuff when it comes to the Texas Rangers. Ranger's Revenge is the best Jim Blawcyzk tale yet.
--Lee Pierce, Author of Rough Justice

  Barnes & Noble Link

Sunday, November 25, 2012

James Reasoner, Clay More, James J: Griffin: Wolf Creek #western


Wolf Creek: 
Book 1, Bloody Trail
Book 2, Kiowa Vengeance
Book 3, Murder in Dogleg City
Book 4, The Taylor County War

by Ford Fargo

Romancing The West is featuring the authors of the Wolf Creek series the last two weeks of November.  If you missed out, here are the first two articles:
Troy D. Smith: Wolf Creek
Bill Crider & Chuck Tyrell: Wolf Creek

Today, three of our Wolf Creek contributors weigh in on their characters and the series in general…

James Reasoner
My character in the Wolf Creek series is G.W. Satterlee, the sheriff of Taylor County. This is actually the first law enforcement job Satterlee has held. In the past he was a civilian scout for the army as well as a buffalo hunter. At this point we don't know what prompted Satterlee to run for sheriff in the first place, but once elected he found himself settling into the job with surprising ease. He has a natural politician's ability to get along with people, and he enjoys the more adventurous aspects of the job, such as chasing after outlaws and battling Indians (something he did in the past while he was working for the army). G.W. (the initials stand for George Washington) doesn't care as much for the mundane, day-to-day details of the job, but to his way of thinking, that's why he has deputies. They can handle all that.

Working on the Wolf Creek series has been a lot of fun, primarily because creator and editor Troy Smith did such a great job laying the foundation for the books. It must be a big challenge to pull together the contributions of half a dozen different authors and make them read seamlessly as a novel, but somehow Troy manages to do it. I've also really enjoyed the passion and enthusiasm that everyone involved in this series has brought to it. Writing is work, of course, but it should be fun, too, and Wolf Creek is.

James Reasoner, author
About James Reasoner:
I write novels and short stories for money (although I'll occasionally write a short story for a non-paying market if it's something I really want to do) and book and movie reviews for fun on my blog. I started out as a mystery writer nearly 35 years ago and still work in that genre and others, but I've done more Westerns than anything else. I've been married to best-selling, award-winning author, uncredited collaborator, editor, and plotter Livia J. Washburn for nearly 35 years. (Note the similarity between the length of my marriage and the length of my writing career. Coincidence? I don't think so.) We live in the same small town in Texas where we both grew up, although it's not so small anymore. (We have a Wal-Mart now!) After all these years, I still love to write and can't imagine doing anything else.

(Visit James Reasoner at his website or on Facebook.)

Clay More
Dr Logan Munro is a Scottish doctor who has seen action in three theatres of war – The Crimean War, The Indian Mutiny and The Civil War. He has endured personal tragedy, having lost Helen, his wife to Malaria in India. He feels guilty that he was unable to save her. He is battle weary, having certified too many deaths and performed too many battlefield amputations on young men.

Logan is the town doctor and he sets the scene in Bloody Trail. As we follow him on a brief morning round, several of the Wolf Creek characters and their relationships are described. As a former military man he springs into action to assist when the town is attacked, and then he tends to the sick and the dying, ensuring that everything that can be done is done, so that he can join the posse. He aims to look after anyone that gets injured, including any of the gang. But, he emphatically tells Sheriff Satterlee, he’ll do whatever is needed to keep them alive, as is proscribed by the Hippocratic Oath, until the legal process takes over and they can hang them.

When Troy came up with the concept of writing a collaborative novel based on the citizens of Wolf Creek I volunteered to write about the town doctor. The old adage is that you should write about what you know, so because I am a town doctor, albeit far-removed from Wolf Creek both in time and distance (I actually live in England, within arrowshot of the ruins of a medieval castle) I thought I could drip some realism into my effort.

Having said that, I must admit that I was somewhat apprehensive when Troy gave me the opportunity to open the story, since not many readers in the USA will have heard of my name. To my mind there was a good chance of losing readers at the outset, so I thank Troy for taking that gamble. Yet the way that we wrote the story panned out well. Troy had worked out the skeleton plot and we all developed our characters and then were given free license to write our part within the framework. We wrote Bloody Trail sequentially, so that I wrote my piece then handed on to Jim, who handed on to Troy and so on. We collaborated as we went along so that each writer engineered for characters to be in the right place at the right time, ready for action.

Troy’s editing was masterful. He dovetailed the whole thing together so that it flowed smoothly. I can honestly say that this has been one of the most enjoyable writing experiences of my career. It was a privilege to work with such a group of fine writers, whose work I know and respect and I am proud that Logan Munro is the Wolf Creek town doctor.

Keith Souter
writing as
Clay More
About Clay More:
My real name is Keith Souter and I was born in St Andrews in Scotland. I studied Medicine at Dundee University and then practiced as a family doctor in the city of Wakefield in England for thirty years. While I was at medical school I started to write children’s stories for a family magazine, but after qualifying as a doctor the exigencies of the job were such that the focus of my writing was on medicine. I have also been a health columnist for almost thirty years and have written about a dozen medical and health books. I am a member of the Society of Authors, The Crime Writers’ Association, Medical Journalists’ Association, International Thriller Writers, Western Writers of America and Western Fictioneers.

(Visit Clay More at his website, blog, or Facebook.)

James J. Griffin
Bill Torrance, the owner of the Wolf Creek Livery Stable, is ostensibly a man who has never touched a weapon. He has only one close friend in town, horse wrangler Jed Stevens. Bill is very much the loner, preferring the company of horses to humans. His ability to communicate with equines is almost mystical.

However, when Wolf Creek is invaded by the Danby gang, Bill turns out to be quite the fighting man. When a posse is formed to go after the outlaws, Bill joins them. His instincts save the posse from disaster when they ride into an ambush. Bill is badly wounded, and some of his past is revealed, including his real name. Much more of that past will be revealed in Book Six, including a surprise even I wasn't expecting. There will also be an unexpected interaction between Bill and Edith Pettigrew, the self-appointed moral arbiter of Wolf Creek.

It's been both an honor and a pleasure to work on the Wolf Creek series. I'm especially grateful for the opportunity to collaborate with so many fine authors whose work I admire. It's also pretty amazing how well everyone has worked together, with no fits of pique or egos run amok. Everyone has labored to produce the best stories possible, and it shows in the quality of the books.

James J. Griffin, author
About James J. Griffin:
I've been in love with horses and fascinated by all things Western, in particular the Texas Rangers, since I was a kid, so when I started writing it was only natural I would write Texas Ranger novels. Luckily, I have my good friends, Texas Ranger Jim Huggins of Company A, and Karl Rehn and Penny Riggs of KR Training in Manheim, Texas, to help with my research. Jim provides advice on the Rangers, while Karl and Penny lend their expertise on weapons of the period. I also travel out West every chance I get for research and relaxation. My two main series are about Texas Rangers Jim Blawcyzk and Cody Havlicek. The books are all very traditional Westerns, and most are suitable for almost all ages.

(Visit James J. Griffin at his website.)

Wolf Creek, Book 4:
The Taylor County War

Andrew Rogers has one of the biggest spreads in Taylor County –but that’s not enough. He wants to eliminate his competition and be the biggest rancher in the state, maybe even run for governor. He’ll stop at nothing to achieve his goals, not even murder. Can Sheriff G.W. Satterlee, and the hands from the T-Bar-B, stop Rogers and his hired killers before the county erupts into a full-scale range war?

Excerpt from Book 4, 
The Taylor County War
(Clay More’s chapter):

Tsu Dong grunted irritably then yanked the door open and strode out, banging it shut behind him.

“A petulant young man,” Logan said, smiling at Mrs Li. And with that thought he again wondered whether the young man’s anger betrayed the sort of personality that could be channelled into the sort of tasks that he suspected Tsu Chiao ordered his nephews to perform.

“Again, I am sorry, Doctor. We do not want our children to have anything to do with Tsu Chiao or any of his ruffians They are not – like us.”

Logan concurred. The Li family were sober, upstanding members of the Wolf Creek Chinese community, whereas Tsu Chiao was, in his opinion, nothing more than an opium dealer, brothel keeper and a ruthless gang boss. Logan despised him and was aware that Tsu Chiao disliked him simply because he was British. He had heard from patients that Tsu Chiao often boasted about having fought in the Opium Wars against the British when he was a young man.

Suddenly the door was violently thrown open.

“Get behind me,” Logan cried to Mrs Li as he spun round, fully expecting to be confronted by an angry Tsu Dong.

Instead it was a red headed young man of about twenty-two, dressed in range clothes, covered in a patina of trail dust. Logan recognised Chris Hartman immediately.

“Doc! Thank god! I’ve been looking for you everywhere. My pa sent me. You’gotta come with me back to the Lazy H?”

“What’s the emergency, Chris?”

“It’s my baby brother, Ethan. He’s been shot!”
~^~
Buy links (print or digital)
Book 1: Bloody Trail -- Amazon, BN.com
Book 2: Kiowa Vengenace -- Amazon, BN.com

Authors and their characters
Bill Crider - Cora Sloane, schoolmarm
Wayne Dundee - Seamus O'Connor, deputy marshal
Phil Dunlap - drifting bounty hunter Rattlesnake Jake
James J. Griffin - Bill Torrance, Livery owner
Jerry Guin - Deputy Marshal Quint Croy
Douglas Hirt - Marcus Sublette, Schoolteacher
LJ Martin - Angus “Spike” Sweeney, blacksmith
Matthew P. Mayo - Rupert "Rupe" Tingley, Town drunk
Kerry Newcomb - James Reginald de Courcey, artist (secretly the outlaw Sampson Quick)
Cheryl Pierson - Derrick McCain, small farmer
Robert J. Randisi - Dave Benteen, gunsmith
James Reasoner - G.W. Satterlee, county sheriff
Frank Roderus - John Hix, barber
Troy D. Smith - Charley Blackfeather, scout; Sam Gardner, town marshal
Clay More - Logan Munro, town doctor
Chuck Tyrell - Billy Below, young cowboy; Sam Jones, gambler
Jackson Lowry - Photographer Wilson “Wil” Marsh
Livia Washburn - Ira Breedlove, crime boss
Matt Pizzolato - Wesley Quaid, Anti-heroic shiftless type


Win Free Books!
Cheryl Pierson is itching to give you a treat!  So one commenter in the next two weeks will win a print copy of 
Wolf Creek: Book 1, Bloody Trail
(USA mailing only)
Comment on every post for extra chances!


Also, comment on this post and you'll be entered to win a Kindle copy of your choice of Troy Smith's Blackwell series (short stories).  (And you'll also be entered to win the Wolf Creek book!)

Drawing for both will be held December 1, 2012, at 9pm Pacific Time.

Please include your email address so we can contact you; otherwise, we'll draw another winner.