If 2 years ago they had said, "In the region yesterday there was 9 cases of the flu, would you have cared?"
When I started this book, I thought it would be a modern western. It had a murder, a Texas Ranger
but it soon morphed into a union problem at a Texas refinery. Soon, the murder and the Ranger
fell into the background and the story became an arbitration hearing with union employees.
The story had a good lead in and the descriptions were good but the author had trouble finding
names for his characters, falling back on celebrities' like Roy Rogers, Gene Autry and others.
The arbitration went in circles, no one was charged with the murder, a black man by the name of
Billy Graham, by the way. Being a black man might have had something to do with it.
Both of my Sketchers have a hole in them. Not in the bottom where you would expect but in the top where the big toe touches.
Hamer's Quest is a book of fiction, a total fabrication bordering on the absurd. I wanted a western, something different from my usual reads but was disappointed by my choice. The pages are filled with name dropping of famous people, products and books, all to fill in pages. In a western one expects the usual fare of gunplay but this has been replaced by explanations of faith from old time religion, running on for pages and pages. Silly conversations make up another large part of the book. I am giving it three stars because it might be suitable as a screenplay. |
I was looking for a change from my usual reading
but found this was not my style of writing. It would
make a decent movie.
A crime story that has us believing that and old reporter is a seasoned member
of the information highway. The book has great flow and holds us from beginning
to end. It leaves us with the belief that there are more stories to come.