Elmer Kelton's The familiar stranger

Steve Kelton

Book - 2024

"Elmer Kelton's Hewey Calloway, one of the best-loved cowboys in all of Western fiction, returns in this novel of his middling years, as he looks for work-but not too much work-in 1904 West Texas. Hewey Calloway had intending to pass straight through Durango, Colorado, en route to visit a friend several miles northeast of the city. He had left his home range about a year before, with a herd of young horses. It was supposed to be a relatively straightforward affair; deliver the horses, collect the payment, and return home with the money. Things got out of hand, however, and there he was in Durango a year later with plans to go north rather than south. Oh, well, he thought, he had always wanted to see new country. It isn't long... before his travels lead him to a cabin on a rainy night. There he meets a young man, sick as a dog, who weakly tries to send him off. And for good reason: the man has smallpox, and soon enough, Hewey catches the deadly disease. The man cares for him in turn, and it's just as he is feeling better that the man disappears. The next morning a Pinkerton detective turns up with posse, looking for a wanted bank robber. As he travels north, Hewey seems to run in with both the young man who tended to him, as well as the detective. But something seems off about the Pinkerton detective, and Hewey keeps his mouth shut. When he reuinites with his friend Hanley, they do everything they can to get to the bottom of the mystery that threatens both theirs and this young man's life"--

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1 copy ordered
Subjects
Genres
Western fiction
Novels
Romans
Published
New York : Forge, Tor Publishing Group 2024.
Language
English
Main Author
Steve Kelton (author)
Other Authors
John Bradshaw (author)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
pages cm
ISBN
9781250331137
Contents unavailable.
Review by Booklist Review

Bradshaw could have easily veered into the maudlin when writing The Familiar Stranger; the torch to complete the novel passed to him only after both Elmer Kelton (the originator of protagonist Hewey Calloway) and son Steve (The Unlikely Lawman, 2022) died. Instead, Bradford chose to echo the same gentle pacing as earlier Calloway novels and focus on the warmth that comes from genuine friendship and affectionate family. Finally escaping a long year in Colorado, Calloway sets out to visit his friend (and retired Texas Ranger) Hanley Baker before heading north to Canada. On the way, he assists a young man with smallpox, Bob Wilson, only to then fall ill himself. Even though Wilson is wanted for a bank robbery, he remains to nurse Calloway. The two men part ways but keep crossing paths. Ultimately believing Wilson's explanation that he is innocent, Calloway partners with Baker, Baker's niece, a grieving blacksmith, and a kindly sheriff to help clear Wilson's name. Bradford honors the Keltons' legacy by embracing the pragmatic dignity associated with traditional western novels.

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.