Showing posts with label Wolf Creek: Book 6 Hell on the Prairie. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Wolf Creek: Book 6 Hell on the Prairie. Show all posts

Monday, May 12, 2014

Review Roundup: Peacemaker Award Nominees, Short Fiction



By Kathleen Rice Adams

The winners of Western Fictioneers’ fourth annual Peacemaker Awards for excellence in western fiction will be revealed June 1. Below are reviews for three of the nominees in the Best Short Fiction category.


“It Takes a Man”
By Cheryl Pierson
in Wolf Creek: Hell on the Prairie
Western Fictioneers, June 2013
$9.89 paperback, ISBN 1490505059
$2.99 Kindle, ASIN B00DPPFUPM
$2.99 most other e-formats, ISBN 9781301613717

Derrick McCain, a recurring character in the Wolf Creek series of collaborative novels, returns to his former home among the Cherokee Nation in Indian Territory to confront recently discovered secrets about his family. His father, a Cherokee leader whose illicit affair with a white woman produced McCain, allegedly is at death’s door. Tortured by his mixed heritage and allegiances to both sides, McCain reconnects with a childhood friend and a Cherokee woman ostracized in a classic case of society blaming the victim for a heinous crime. McCain must make some difficult choices that will affect his life, and the lives of others, for years to come.

Author Cheryl Pierson writes both traditional westerns and western historical romance. In “It Takes a Man,” her strong skills in the romance genre shine. McCain emerges as a swoon-worthy hero, yet Pierson manages a delicate balance between romantic sentimentality and thorny issues including race relations and society’s expectations.


“The Last Free Trapper”
By Jory Sherman
in A Wolf Creek Christmas
Western Fictioneers, November 2013
$8.99 paperback, ISBN 149372651X
$2.99 Kindle, ASIN B00GFEZA5A
$2.99 most other e-formats, ISBN 9781310352843

Mountain man Roman Hatchett faces the end of an era, unwilling to change but unable to prevent the disappearance of the only life he knows. In “The Last Free Trapper,” author Jory Sherman, recipient of the 2012 Peacemaker Award for Life Achievement, spins a character-driven tale rife with subtle symbolism. Using simple, unadorned prose in achingly eloquent ways, Sherman evokes a time and place of tremendous upheaval in the American West.

Hatchett searches his soul while attending a dying enemy. What he learns about himself and humanity as a whole is both heart-wrenching and hopeful.


“Charlie’s Pie”
By Livia J. Washburn
in Wishing for a Cowboy
Prairie Rose Publications, October 2013
$12.60 paperback, ISBN 061591070X
$2.99 Kindle, ASIN B00G9GTWVC
$2.99 most other e-formats, ISBN 9781311521330

Alone in a remote Texas cabin while her husband and son seek a suitable Christmas tree in the forest some distance away, Lauralee Brannam bakes her son’s favorite pie for the boy’s Christmas Eve birthday. When a wounded stranger collapses at her doorstep, she assumes the man is an outlaw on the run. Nevertheless, she nurses him back to health, setting in motion a whirlwind of violence.

Award-winning author Livia J. Washburn weaves tragedy, traditional western action, and romance in a way that touches the heart but never veers into the maudlin or syrupy. The suspense and ultimate resolution of the mystery at the core of the story will push readers through the tale like a West Texas wind. Ultimately, redemption ties up the package with a Christmas bow made all the more beautiful by its frayed edges.


Kathleen Rice Adams is a Texan, a voracious reader, a professional journalist, and an author. She received review copies of Wolf Creek: Hell on the Prairie, A Wolf Creek Christmas, and Wishing for a Cowboy from the publishers. Her opinions are her own and are neither endorsed nor necessarily supported by Western Fictioneers or individual members of the organization. Links in the review are for convenience only; they do not produce affiliate revenue.



Thursday, October 24, 2013

THE DOCTOR'S BAG



ELECTROTHERAPY - the shocking treatment

By Keith Souter aka CLAY MORE




In my first western novel Raw Deal at Pasco Springs, believe it or not, one of the main characters is a doctor. He considered himself to be an up-to-date doctor and used electrotherapy in his practice. He was not alone in that, for doctors in Europe and America were adding it to their range of treatments. 

Here is a snippet:

Lucinda squeezed Tom’s hand while Doc Hawkins deftly sutured the wound on her shoulder.
‘You were lucky my girl,’ the doctor remarked, peering through wire framed spectacles perched on the tip of his nose. ‘A few inches East and …’
‘Don’t even think of that, Doc,’ Lucinda said with a shiver. ‘It’s bad enough that they murdered poor Curly.’
The doctor straightened up and sucked air between his teeth. ‘Your arm’s going to feel real numb for a few days, unless I stimulate the nerves and muscle.’ He  crossed his consulting room to a table on the far side of his roll-top desk. It was bedecked with strange looking glass jars full of liquids, rods and copper coils. He selected one with long wires leading from it and returned to the couch.
‘The very latest in medicine from back East,’ he explained. ‘This is a galvanic battery for giving what they call Faradic Stimulation.’ He handed Lucinda a rod to hold while he strapped a paddle gently over her upper arm.
‘This’ll tickle a bit,’ he informed her as he twisted wires together on top of the battery. Immediately the muscles on her arm started to twitch so that despite herself, Lucinda giggled.
‘Why it’s making my arm move all by itself,’ she uttered in amazement.
‘This is the future, folks,’ said the doctor. ‘Copper! These wires transmit electric currents. Back East they have buildings illuminated with electric light.’ His  eyes twinkled almost reverently, as if he could see this vision of the future. ‘One day we’ll laugh at our primitive kerosene lamps and simple electric batteries like these.’
Lucinda giggled again. ‘I think you’d better turn this tickling machine of yours off now Doc, or I’m going to pee myself with laughing.’


 Electricity was definitely in the air in the nineteenth century. That is to say that the discoveries about electricity that had been made in the previous century had opened up whole new areas of research. The Italian Luigi Galvani (1737-1798) an anatomist and professor of obstetrics at Bologna University had performed experiments on frogs’ legs and discovered that electricity could make them twitch. Then Alessandro Volta (1745-1827), a professor of physics at Pavia University invented the first battery, the voltaic pile.
It seemed that this was a power that could have immense benefit in medicine – and all sorts of folk started using it.

John Wesley and Ethereal Fire
The name of John Wesley (1703-1791) is forever associated with Methodism, which he founded along with his younger brother Charles Wesley. He was an Anglican minister but found himself banned from many pulpits because his religious views were considered radical. He therefore travelled extensively, both in England and America, preaching in open areas to the poor whom he often found to be excluded from churches. In America he railed against the practice of slavery.



            Not only did he believe that he was called to help people with their spiritual needs, but he also wrote about medicine and how people could use self-help techniques when they were ill. His book Primitive Physick was published in 1747 and was widely sold and used.


In that same year he saw for the first time an exhibition of Galvanism, or the use of electric batteries called Leyden jars to create shocks. Wesley was quick to grasp the opportunities that this amazing power, which he called ‘ethereal fire’, could hold. He became a devotee of electrotherapy and began using it to treat the poor on his travels and in a special free dispensary that he established. In 1759 he wrote The Desideratum, or Electricity made plain and useful.
Wesley subscribed to the theory that ethereal fire, as they knew electricity, caused capillaries to dilate and that it released all manner of blockages that were causing disease.
Soon ‘ethereal fire’ was being used to give shocks to people to cure them of arthritis and rheumatism, epilepsy, blindness, paralysis, back pain, sciatica and that cursed affliction of the spirits, melancholia or depression. So successful were his treatments that other dispensaries were established and Wesley’s reputation as a healer soared.
            Many of the conditions that he treated may have been amenable to electrical shocks. Certainly his use of it in depression may have been one of the only effective treatments at that time.

Nineteenth century electrotherapy
The Victorians were ingenious at constructing machines and gadgets. There was something awe-inspiring about medical machines with wires, rotating parts and cylinders and flasks that sparked and produced shocks. Doctors all over Europe and America invested in electrotherapy machines to treat everything from headaches to piles. Indeed a common treatment for piles was called ‘anal Faradism’, which involved the insertion of a rod into the rectum, followed by an electrical discharge to singe the piles. It must have been excruciating.
            All manner of belts, straps, rings and supports, which could be ‘charged’ were devised. They all had a dramatic effect, since they would produce a sensation that people could feel, and since they felt it so strongly it would be likely to produce a strong placebo effect. This is not to say, however, that any beneficial effect would be purely placebic, since we know today that various types of electrical stimulation can be helpful in the management of pain. Transcutaneous Electrical nerve Stimulation, or TNS is such a method commonly used today.

              And the belt had an internal attachment to help with other problems!

            Of less certain effect, however, would be the Galvanic Spectacles, which were invented and patented by Judah Moses of Hartford, USA in 1868. A British patent for a similar invention was granted to John Leighton in 1888. These consisted of a spectacles frame with a zinc plate and a chrome plate which settled over the bridge of the nose, with leads that attached to a small galvanic battery. A discharge of electricity was thought to stimulate the optic nerve, which they proposed would improve the eyesight. Some users of the galvanic spectacles even suggested that it would clear sinusitis and cure the common cold.

            In Paris in 1853 Dr Guillaume Duchenne published an account of his success with electricity in various conditions.  His work A Treatise on Localised Electrization and its Application to Pathology and Therapeutics was to prove influential in medical circles.
            Doctors working in the medical asylums of the day had virtually no effective treatments. Patients were physically restrained and there was no drug that could help psychotic states or the harrowing condition of depression. Electrotherapy seemed to offer some help, even if no-one knew how it worked. There were three types of electricity that they could use. Galvanism, which produced a direct current. Faradism or an induced current. And Static electricity given directly or charged in a Leyden jar. However, despite initial promise and continued use during the Victorian era the results were quite disappointing and eventually it fell into disuse. It was not reintroduced until 1938 when Cerletti and Bini introduced a very specific therapeutic use of electricity in the technique of Electro-Convulsive Therapy, or ECT, in which electricity was applied to one or both hemispheres of the brain in order to induce a convulsion.
            Other doctors were not to rigid and thought that electrotherapy had a legitimate place in the treatment of rheumatic and arthritic conditions. Indeed, it was in this area that its use would thrive all through the Victorian era and well into the twentieth century. Even today in the twenty-first century it has a place in many painful conditions, when used under the guidance of appropriately trained practitioners. 


Hell on the Prairie, the sixth Wolf Creek book features Keith (Clay More's) character Dr Logan Munro, the town doctor in THE OATH, a story about a spectre from his past. 


Logan has been in Books 1, 4 and 6, and 8 and is scheduled for more.


And his other new character, Doc Marcus Quigley, dentist, gambler and occasional bounty hunter continues in his quest to bring a murderer to justice, in RATTLER'S NEST in his  ebook short stories THE ADVENTURES OF DOCTOR MARCUS QUIGLEY published by High Noon Press.



Raw Deal at Pasco Springs, featuring that electrotherapy-toting doctor was originally published by Hale as a Black Horse Western, but is now available as an ebook from Western Fictioneers Library.


Monday, October 14, 2013

Review Roundup: Hell is Relative

Wolf Creek Book 6: Hell on the Prairie
By Ford Fargo
Western Fictioneers, June 2013
$10.99 paperback, ISBN 1490505059
$2.99 Kindle, ASIN B00DPPFUPM
$2.99 most other e-formats, ISBN 9781301613717
240 pages

Unlike previous volumes in the series, Wolf Creek Book 6: Hell on the Prairie is not a collaborative novel. Instead, in this collection of short stories, seven members of the posse collectively known as Ford Fargo wrote as themselves. The effect is both cacophonous and musical, as each author’s voice is distinctive when not required to disappear behind the Ford Fargo filter.

Troy D. Smith, Chuck Tyrell, Clay More, Cheryl Pierson, Jerry Guin, and James J. Griffin all write characters who are pillars of Wolf Creek society—though being a pillar of society in Wolf Creek generally indicates a character has earned an extreme lack of hospitality somewhere else. Jacquie Rogers introduces a group of newcomers whose potential to become series regulars seems iffy, mostly because the characters insist they are unwilling to stick around.

Smith’s, Tyrell’s, and More’s stories provide series and character backstory. Marshal Sam Gardner (Smith) reveals a hidden talent. Who suspected the man was an expert at something besides loafing and sardonic wit? Tyrell gives readers a glimpse at cowboy Billy Below’s genesis in a sweeping saga almost too long to be called short. Below has come a long way from the naïve boy who left home under a different name. Doctor Logan Munro’s past may be the most surprising, and More weaves the tale with no little mystery and quite a bit of violence. The psychological games Munro and his adversary play would do a thriller proud.

Pierson’s and Griffin’s stories take familiar characters in new directions. In Derrick McCain’s story, Pierson’s talents as a romance author shine. McCain, tortured by his mixed heritage and obligations to both sides, emerges as a swoon-worthy hero, yet Pierson manages a delicate balance between romantic sentimentality and thorny issues. Griffin drops a bomb on both readers and his character, perennially shirtless livery owner and former Texas Ranger Ben Tolliver. Tolliver may have dropped his alias several books ago, but he didn’t quite shed his past, which bounces into his present in a big way. McCain’s and Tolliver’s new issues not only deepen each man’s character, but also provide intriguing potential fodder for future entries in the Wolf Creek series.

Guin’s and Rogers’ stories stand out because they’re different from the others. Although series regular Deputy Quint Croy is the presumed narrator of his tale, the story really belongs to a relatively minor Wolf Creek character: Negro saloon owner Asa Pepper. The choice seems odd, until one realizes Pepper’s backstory speaks to the character of the town itself. Rogers’ story is even more unusual in the context of the series. Her characters, just passing through on their way to the West Coast, have never been seen before and may never show up again. The story displays Rogers’ signature sarcasm, and the characters are endearing. Surely Wolf Creek could use a team of good mules.

Hell on the Prairie may not be what fans have come to expect from the series, but none of the stories disappoint. More Wolf Creek anthologies would not go amiss.



Kathleen Rice Adams is a Texan, a voracious reader, a professional journalist, and a novelist in training. She received a review copy of Wolf Creek Book 6 from the publisher. Her opinions are her own and are neither endorsed nor necessarily supported by Western Fictioneers or individual members of the organization. Links in the review are for convenience only; they do not produce affiliate revenue.

Tuesday, August 6, 2013

WOLF CREEK TUESDAY BY CHERYL PIERSON


Troy's out of town today so I'm putting up a post about my characters, Derrick McCain and Carson Ridge, and borrowing a bit of Troy's description of them both.

In case this is your first look at the world of Wolf Creek, here's a bit of what Troy has to say about it.

"Wolf Creek is probably the most unique Western series ever produced. It is published by Western Fictioneers and written by Ford Fargo- who is actually about twenty different Western authors. Each one has created a unique character, and in each installment six authors collaborate to tell a story from the points of view of their particular creations.

It may sound complicated. but the result is anything but: each volume holds together remarkably well, and the series has been creating quite a bit of buzz.

I am the series editor, and one of my two characters appears in each book to help tie things together. Other than me we have a wonderful mix of genre veterans and best selling authors and up-and-coming newer writers who are making their mark."---TROY D. SMITH


GIVEAWAY: Before we go any further, I want to talk about the giveaway today! I'm going to be giving away a trade paperback copy of Bloody Trail to one of our visitors. ANYONE WHO LEAVES A COMMENT ON THIS OR ANY OF THE OTHER WOLF CREEK TUESDAY ARCHIVED BLOGS along with a contact email address will be eligible to win (you can also send said addy to me, at fabkat_edit@yahoo.com if you prefer it not be public- but you still have to leave a comment!)


That said, let's take a look at my character, Derrick McCain, farmer, as Troy describes him.

Derrick is 18 when the War Between the States begins. His two older brothers leave immediately, refusing to take him with them. A few days after they leave, Derrick strikes out on his own, determined to make his own way. He joins up with the regular Confederate Army, with the hope that one day he will return to Wolf Creek and marry his sweetheart, Jolene. Things don't work out as he'd thought. His brothers are killed at Shiloh, and not long after, he receives word that his father, Andrew, has been murdered for his outspoken politics by a band of Jayhawkers. At this news, Derrick deserts to join up with Jim Danby's guerrilla band, who ride with Quantrill and Bloody Bill Anderson, to seek revenge on the Jayhawkers who murdered his father.

The day comes when Danby intends to do something so heinous that Derrick rebels, refusing to obey direct orders from the gang leader. Derrick tells him that he will not torture and murder their captives, a small band of black Union soldiers who were sent to attack Bloody Bill Anderson during the Centralia Massacre. Danby has Derrick beaten and left for dead, giving orders for the others in his band to shoot the Union soldiers. But one of the black men, Charley Blackfeather, manages to get away, never knowing that Derrick stood up for them.

Derrick is found by a farmer who lives nearby and taken to the man's house, where he's cared for. The end of the war comes as Derrick heals enough to ride once more. He returns to Wolf Creek, not sure of his place in the world--Jolene has married a Yankee, and he finds himself the only male survivor of the McCain family. He steps into the unwanted role of settling into the life of a farmer, his younger sister less than welcoming since she has married due to necessity because of his absence. Derrick's world is turned upside down a few years down the road when the Danby gang comes to pay the citizens of Wolf Creek a call. Derrick is sure of only one thing this time around: in order to make peace with himself, he has to ride with the posse to avenge what Danby's gang has done to his town. He swears to kill or be killed, on the BLOODY TRAIL.

And a little about one of my supporting characters, CARSON RIDGE, from Troy:
CARSON RIDGE: A full-blood Cherokee and Derrick McCain's childhood best friend. Raised in the eastern part of Indian Territory in the Cherokee Nation, he's well-educated having attended the Indian school where Derrick's father was headmaster for several years. When Derrick's family moves to Wolf Creek, Kansas, Carson hopes that once Derrick learns the reason for the move, he will someday return to Indian Territory and the heritage that belongs to him. Carson's past is something he doesn't talk about much. He has become a Lighthorse officer for the Cherokee Nation. As the years pass, he believes he will never see his friend again...until fate brings them together under the most unlikely circumstance.

The focus of Wolf Creek Book 5: SHOWDOWN AT DEMON'S DROP centers on Derrick when he must go after some renegades who have kidnapped his sister, Kathleen.

And he turns up again in Wolf Creek Book 6: HELL ON THE PRAIRIE, which is a collection of short stories about some of the characters in the Wolf Creek series. I enjoyed working on this short story about Derrick because it lets the reader see into his personality more deeply--and there are certainly some twists and turns that are headed his way!


And here is some background on me:

I was born in Duncan, Oklahoma, and grew up in Seminole, Oklahoma. I graduated from the University of Oklahoma, and hold a B.A. in English. I have taught numerous writing classes and workshops over the past years and also work on an individual basis with many of my students, and other authors, locally and nationwide.

My most recent publications include my YA historical western, "KANE'S CHANCE" with WESTERN TRAIL BLAZER publishing. Another recent publication in the western historical romance genre is the June release, "GABRIEL'S LAW". The three WOLF CREEK publications mentioned above have come about over the past year, and have all spent time on Amazon's "TOP 100 HOT NEW WESTERN RELEASES" list for Kindle in the past month! Switching from the historical genre to contemporary romantic suspense, my third novel, "SWEET DANGER" was released through THE WILD ROSE PRESS in 2010 and reissued with Publishing by Rebecca J. Vickery this past year. "TEMPTATION'S TOUCH", also a contemporary romantic suspense, came out last year through THE WILD ROSE PRESS.

I live with my husband in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, where we've been for the past 27 years. I have two grown children, ages 23 and 26, and my "granddog", Embry, (who lives with us.)

TO SEE ALL OF MY WORK, PLEASE GO TO MY AUTHOR PAGE HERE:

https://www.amazon.com/author/cherylpierson