Pop Jennings took care of the horse and then warmed up a pot of beans
and a pan full of bacon for Jeff. After Jeff had eaten, the old man looked at
him with shrewd, twinkling eyes and asked, “Are you ridin’ or lookin’?”
“I'm not headed any place in particular, if that's what you mean,” Jeff
said.
“Then you're lookin’. There's only two kinds of people. One kind is
always ridin’ over the hills to a place where the grass is greener. They never
find it. The other kind is lookin’ for a place to settle down and it don't
matter much to ‘em where that place is. I figure you're the looking kind.”—Bill Gulick, Gambler’s Luck
This 1955 anthology is subtitled “A Collection of Stories About
Gunslingers.”
It has 11 stories from Gulick, L.L. Foreman, Elmore Leonard, Thomas
Thompson, Bennett Foster, John Jo Carpenter, Tom Blackburn, Steve Frazee, William
Holder, Verne Athanas, and Will Brown.
Some are a little less than others, but the following tales are worth
an afternoon’s read: Gulick’s work, Steve Frazee’s “Learn the Hard Way,”
Will Brown’s “Into the Guns,” and the oft-anthologized Leonard’s “3:10
to Yuma.”
Overall, a solid sampling of the 1950s style of hardmen.
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