| Author Max McCoy Home Page | ||
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Novels
Damnation Road Canyon Diablo Hellfire Canyon I, Quantrill A Breed Apart Into the West Hinterland The Moon Pool Jesse Home to Texas The Wild Rider Sons of Fire The Sixth Rider
Indiana Jones novels:
Philosopher's Stone The Hollow Earth The Dinosaur Egg Secret of the Sphinx
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Damnation Road coming Sept. 7, 2010! "Wickedly Savage" -- Johnny D. Boggs It's the last chance for Jacob Gamble, Rough Rider, outlaw and man of a few principles. Nearing 50 and flat broke, Jacob bends his own rule about robbing trains. But by the time he reaches the payroll safe on a Rock Island train, he finds another thief there first with a bullet in his head. Jacob is caught holding the bag - and turned into hero. A broke hero. Shackled by unwanted fame, running from a life gone wrong, and raising the suspicions of a Pinkerton detective, Jacob listens to a woman: beautiful and tattooed by the Indians who seized her as a child. Anise Weathers knows of a treasure hidden in a cave along the Jornada del Muerto - a merciless hundred mile stretch of hell on earth guarded by Apache warriors. Now, Jacob will follow Anise into the most savage and deadly territory in the southwest - where few ever come out of Canyon Diablo alive. Hellfire Canyon wins Spur Award and is named a Kansas Notable Book NOVEL FEATURES OZARK SERIAL KILLER ALF BOLIN It was also named a Kansas Notable Book for 2008 by the Kansas State Library. In the story, Bolin a real-life killer who
terrorized this neck of the Ozarks from a fortress-like limestone formation
called Murder Rocks plays mentor to a budding fiddler and outlaw named
Jacob Gamble. McCoy is an assistant professor of journalism at Emporia (Kansas) State University. His next novel, to be released in May 2008 by Signet, is about the last days of William Clarke Quantrill, the notorious guerilla chieftain. It is called I, Quantrill. Praise for Hellfire Canyon: "A good example of a great modern
western is Max McCoys Hellfire Canyon... Hellfire Canyon is the
story of Jacob Gamble: outlaw, renegade and general hell-raiser. He is
the archetypal western outlaw, with one exception: He is likable, and
rather than the antagonist, he is the hero... Hellfire Canyon is
not the typical. There is violence and even gun play, but there is
morea yearning and understanding of history, legend, and even
folklore... Hellfire Canyon is a campfire story. It is raw, tender, and
fresh, but we are left knowing it isnt the real story. It is the
story the witnessJacob Gamblewants us to know, or perhaps more
accurately thinks we want to know. It is more folklore and legend than
anything else, and I loved every word." "In Hellfire Canyon, Max McCoy spins quite a tale of Civil War-era Missouri featuring one of America's first serial killers who terrorized an area of southern Taney County near the Arkansas state line...While billed as a Western, Hellfire Canyon is an interesting historical novel, an engrossing, intriguing, well-told story." -- Thomas Garrett, the Baxter Bulletin. Hellfire Canyon, which features Ozark serial killer Alf Bolin, was released in February 2007 by Kensington. Praise for A Breed Apart: "McCoy at his best, proving himself once again as a master of his craft." -- Ralph Cotton, USA Today bestselling author. "This is a fast moving story that is easily told with fascinating characters. McCoy is a veteran western writer and his shows both in his settings and dialogue. The people are so believable, it is easy to imagine this is truly how it was in a much unsettled and untamed country. This is a terrific book and I hope McCoy comes back to tell more stories about the legendary Wild Bill. Theres lots more to tell." -- Ron Fortier, Pulp Fiction Reviews. Read the review. "McCoy blends fact and fiction in A Breed Apart, creating a Wild Bill Hickok as full of self-doubt and uncertainty as a frontier Hamlet... McCoy's style is crisp, his language and description is colorful, all quite suited for his book's setting." -- Thomas Garrett, the Baxter Bulletin. A
Breed Apart was released in November 2006 by Signet. The
novel covers the early life of Wild Bill, up to his showdown with Dave
Tutt on the Springfield, Missouri, square on July 21, 1865. The Moon Pool has been hailed as an "intelligent thriller" by Publishers Weekly: "Mystery and mythology collide in this intelligent thriller, which is set largely in the uncharted depths of an underwater mining city beneath Bonne Terre, Mo. McCoy (who has written several Indiana Jones novels) draws on his experiences as an investigative journalist and an Advanced Open Water scuba diver to tell the tale of a serial killer bent on reenacting the abduction of the Greek mythological figure Persephone.... Tightly drawn characters, a vile villain and a satisfying, thought-provoking conclusion make this a compelling read." For more about The Moon Pool, go here.
Go to the Leisure Books website. |
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