Thursday, November 21, 2024

Dead Shot: The Memoir of Walter Ferguson, Soldier, Marshal, Bootlegger is Available Today

 


Today is the climax of the relentless crescendo of hyperbole surrounding the release of my first Western, Dead Shot: The Memoir of Walte Ferguson, Soldier, Marshal, Bootlegger. Some may consider my use of “hyperbole” to itself be hyperbolic. Based on my standards of marketing, I do not.

Dead Shot was as much fun as I’ve had writing a book. The research was fun. Finding a voice I liked was fun. Even the first draft, which I usually consider to be the literary equivalent of searching excrement for intestinal parasites, was fun. Reading it to The Beloved Spouse™ was a lot of fun, especially when I saw her reaction, which was as encouraging as any I have received from her on a book, and she’s endured listened to them all.

In short, I enjoyed the entire process.

[Editor’s Note: It is generally accepted to be bad practice to use a loved one as a sounding board when judging the merit of a work in progress. This is not the case with TBS. She is not bashful about pointing out weaknesses or things that don’t make sense to her. While I don’t always take her suggestions, I always consider them, often discuss them, sometimes at length. Even if I don’t incorporate a suggestion, I have come to trust her opinion enough to know that, if she pointed something out, I need to make a change, even if it’s not the one she’d like.]

I shared a draft with J.D. Rhoades, author of the Jack Keller series (among others) as well as a highly acclaimed Western of his own, The Killing Look. Here’s what he had to say about Dead Shot:

"A fascinating, picaresque journey through a tumultuous post-Civil-War American West. Walter tells his tale with scrupulous honesty and wry wit as he encounters legends and makes a few of his own. Fans of Thomas Berger's Little Big Man are going to love this one. Highly recommended. "

I’m as happy with how Dead Shot turned out as I’ve been with anything I’ve written. What’s on the page captures when I had in my head as well or better as any previous work, whether novel, short story, or flash fiction. It’s even made me reconsider bringing out the Western I abandoned a few years ago, though that won’t be anytime soon, as I have ideas I want to work on stacked up like jets over LaGuardia Airport in bad weather.

One last excerpt before I leave you to your holiday preparations.

Knowing about marshals’ ability to collect rewards, you may wonder what I found attractive about bounty hunting. It was simple. As a bounty hunter I was not constrained by having to serve routine warrants, transport prisoners, or stand guard over a jail or courtroom. I was also not required to pay to bury anyone I might have to kill. So long as I turned in the wanted party, I was paid, often on the spot.

Bounty hunting was lonely work. You rarely took partners unless going after a gang, and then you kept one eye on your pards for fear one of them might decide to increase the size of his share by cutting down the number of shares. I typically stayed away from the big money bounties, or those marked “Dead or Alive.” I made a decent living picking up some of the lesser outlaws, as they were not as likely to shoot it out, especially with a man who had my reputation with a gun.

Dead Shot is available for free download through my website in MOBI, EPUB, and PDF formats by visiting https://danakingauthor.com/

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