Today returning author Jon Land takes over our blog to talk to us about The Ten Best Modern-Day Westerns.
Jon's latest novel is Strong from the Heart (28 July 2020, Forge Books, 368 pages), a Thriller, book eleven in the Caitlin Strong series, and you can find out all about it in our full feature published earlier today.
"Land's best effort ever, a thriller that had me riveted from start to end. With this book he stands shoulder to shoulder with Child, Connelly, Gardner and Gerritsen." --Strand Magazine
"A mind-blowing tale that takes a flamethrower to our psyches to warm the chill it leaves up our spines. Seething with energy and replete with wondrously staged set pieces, this is thriller writing that defies genre even as it reminds us why we love to read." --NYK Daily
|| Synopsis || Teaser: KCR Preview || The Series || Author Guest Post || About the Author || Giveaway & Tour Stops ||
Jon's latest novel is Strong from the Heart (28 July 2020, Forge Books, 368 pages), a Thriller, book eleven in the Caitlin Strong series, and you can find out all about it in our full feature published earlier today.
"Land's best effort ever, a thriller that had me riveted from start to end. With this book he stands shoulder to shoulder with Child, Connelly, Gardner and Gerritsen." --Strand Magazine
"A mind-blowing tale that takes a flamethrower to our psyches to warm the chill it leaves up our spines. Seething with energy and replete with wondrously staged set pieces, this is thriller writing that defies genre even as it reminds us why we love to read." --NYK Daily
|| Synopsis || Teaser: KCR Preview || The Series || Author Guest Post || About the Author || Giveaway & Tour Stops ||
The Ten Best Modern-Day Westerns
by Jon LandWhen asked about my Caitlin Strong series, I always describe them as modern-day westerns. And, in fact, the thriller form itself owes a great deal of its heritage to that genre. Having grown up with the films of Audie Murphy and Roy Rogers, not to mention classics like Shane, The Magnificent Seven, and High Noon along with a host of TV shows, westerns were everywhere.
Lee Child's Jack Reacher: The most quintessential of the lot. Think about it: Instead of a horse, Reacher rides a bus or a train. He shows up in a town, sometimes a city, wipes out the bad guys, then gets back on the bus or train and moves on to his next step to repeat the process all over again. Here, as in westerns, we see staples like weak or ineffectual law enforcement, corruption and, often, one big bad villain running herd over it all. Until Reacher arrives, that is.
C. J. Box's Joe Pickett: Box’s seminal Wyoming game warden resembles the federal marshal of western lore in that he is the only real law for hundreds of square miles. And, like plenty of western lawmen, he has a morally-challenged sidekick in the deadly Nate Romanowski who plays Doc Holliday to Pickett’s Wyatt Earp. And the villains the pair take on time after time bear an intrinsic connection to the kind of cattle barons and land grabbers battling over the likes of mineral and water rights. Kind of like going forward in reverse.
Craig Johnson's Longmire: Walt Longmire is the kind of crusty, middle-aged sheriff made famous as anti—or, at least, reluctant—heroes in classic westerns. Normally, they have one more fight left in them but Longmire never seems to run out of punches. Brilliantly played by Robert Taylor on the TV show, this small-town sheriff with big problems on his plate is a cultural anachronism who brings the times to him instead of adapting. And when things go bad, as is so true in the lore of westerns, he’s all the town has to turn to.
Elmore Leonard's Raylan Givens (Justified): Arguably the great author’s greatest creation, the character made famous by the hit FX show appeared in two novels (Riding The Rap and Pronto), in addition to a collection of short stories. Timothy Olyphant’s wondrously realized performance opened with him gunning down Miami gangster Tommy Bucks . . . because Bucks didn’t leave town in his allotted twenty-four hours. But the episode that featured a hitman who’s “killed more men than malaria” coming to town gunning for Raylan fit the western motif to a T, right down to the climactic shootout where our stalwart deputy US Marshal literally outdraws his opponent.
Ian Fleming's James Bond: In many ways, the Cold War brought us the morphing of the western gunfighter hero, made famous in the dime novels of the early 20th century, into the spy. The difference, of course, was that the likes of James Bond served a nation and had a license to kill legally. He carried a Walther PPK instead of a Colt Peacemaker and stopped marauding bad guys from destroying entire countries instead of just towns and took on rivals every bit his equal, like Oddjob and Red Grant, while climbing the ladder to the true masterminds out to fashion a new world order.
Richard Stark's Parker: The stoically deadly Parker (perfectly played by Lee Marvin in the classic film Point Blank and based on The Hunter) embodies the very concept of what Shane author Jack Schaefer called the “savior psychopath.” A bad guy who occasionally turns away from the dark side to sample the light. Parker is as much a relentless force of nature as a human being. He’s not going to lose and if you wrong him, violate his murky code of honor, expect violent repercussions. Like the outlaw who decides to save the town from bandits instead of helping them to burn it down.
Gregg Hurwitz's Orphan X: In many ways Hurwitz’s modern-day gunslinger Evan Smoak is the neatest fit for the mold cast by westerns. He’s literally the stranger who rides in out of nowhere, the Man with No Name emerging form Italian spaghetti westerns or their American offspring such as High Plains Drifter. Like Parker, Smoak has a streak of moral ambiguity, but he tends to be more like Jack Reacher, and Shane, when it comes to standing up for what’s right. A savior psychopath indeed.
Brad Taylor's Pike Logan, Brad Thor's Scot Harvath, and Vince Flynn’s Mitch Rapp: This trio of great thriller series that all emerged from the smoke of 9/11 feature the gunfighter morphing into special ops soldier, aka Navy SEALS of Delta Force operators. And to varying degrees all three cover one of the most dominant themes of the western: redemption. Like the gunfighters of old, Logan, Harvath and Rapp face burnout and might rather put their worlds behind them, but their natures keep them fighting and killing. They are who they are and we’re lucky to have them, just like Joe Starrett (Van Heflin) and his family were lucky to have Shane.
Robert Crais's Joe Pike: There’s nothing subtle about the former Recon Marine who started out as Elvis Cole’s sidekick, only to become the basis of a series centered around him on top of that. And in that sense he’s about the purest throwback to gunfighters on this list, wielding a .357 magnum in place of an old-fashioned six-shooter. He’s as much like Jack Wilson (Jack Palance in the movie) as Shane, especially since Wilson exemplifies the man Shane used to be. Pike, on the other hand, is what he’s always been, sticking to a moral code that inevitably finds him sticking up for those who can’t stick up for themselves.
I am a huge fan of this series and am looking forward to reading this book.
ReplyDeleteWhat a beautiful layout! That and the graphics make my words sound much, much better than they would have normally. Kudos for such great work on this!
ReplyDeleteHey Jon, thank you for popping by! I am glad you like it, and thank you, it was my pleasure :-)
ReplyDeleteI really need to catch up with your series, as it sounds right up my street.
I hope you are having a great tour!
Flora