
All stories, thus far, are standalones featuring detective Jack Laramie, grandson of Western legend Cash Laramie, who roves the 1950s landscape in his DeSoto and living out of the attached horse trailer. He carries Cash's old Colt and has much of his granddaddy's grit but his adventures are very much his own as he scrapes along, wandering from town to town, to eke out a living.
If you like hard-boiled noir adventures with a touch of mystery, well, here's "The Girls of Bunker Pines" to get you started that Mr. Dundee says has, ".. all the ingredients you need for some very satisfying reading entertainment."
6 comments:
G.E. used to stand for General Electric. These days it stands for General Excellence. I look forward to more Drifter Detective stories.
You ain't a-kidding. Garn can run the board in his sleep.
sounds good. I still have to get to that third one(soon I expect). Been away a while you know.
Randy, I hope you are in a better place now, friend.
Thank you, gentlemen. The Girls of Bunker Pines, and all the Drifter stories to date, have been a blast to write . . . and Wide Spot in the Road was a blast to read.
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