Hardback : $41.79
“Brett Riley’s COMANCHE is the best western-horror-thriller-ghost story-PI novel ever written."—Tod Goldberg, author of Gangsterland
Like a cylinder in a six-shooter, what goes around, comes around.
In 1887 near the tiny Texas town of Comanche, a posse finally ends the murderous career of The Piney Woods Kid in a hail of bullets. Still in the grip of blood-lust, the vigilantes hack the Kid’s corpse to bits in the dead house behind the train depot. The people of Comanche rejoice. Justice has been done. A long bloody chapter in the town’s history is over.
The year is now 2016. Comanche police are stymied by a double murder at the train depot. Witnesses swear the killer was dressed like an old-time gunslinger. Rumors fly that it’s the ghost of The Piney Woods Kid, back to wreak revenge on the descendants of the vigilantes who killed him.
Help arrives in the form of a team of investigators from New Orleans. Shunned by the local community and haunted by their own pasts, they’re nonetheless determined to unravel the mystery. They follow the evidence and soon find themselves in the crosshairs of the killer.
“Brett Riley’s COMANCHE is the best western-horror-thriller-ghost story-PI novel ever written."—Tod Goldberg, author of Gangsterland
Like a cylinder in a six-shooter, what goes around, comes around.
In 1887 near the tiny Texas town of Comanche, a posse finally ends the murderous career of The Piney Woods Kid in a hail of bullets. Still in the grip of blood-lust, the vigilantes hack the Kid’s corpse to bits in the dead house behind the train depot. The people of Comanche rejoice. Justice has been done. A long bloody chapter in the town’s history is over.
The year is now 2016. Comanche police are stymied by a double murder at the train depot. Witnesses swear the killer was dressed like an old-time gunslinger. Rumors fly that it’s the ghost of The Piney Woods Kid, back to wreak revenge on the descendants of the vigilantes who killed him.
Help arrives in the form of a team of investigators from New Orleans. Shunned by the local community and haunted by their own pasts, they’re nonetheless determined to unravel the mystery. They follow the evidence and soon find themselves in the crosshairs of the killer.
"Your ancestors killed me. Prepare to die."
Brett Riley is professor of English at the College of Southern Nevada. He grew up in southeastern Arkansas and earned his Ph.D. in contemporary American fiction and film at Louisiana State University. The published author of a body of short fiction, Riley has also won numerous awards for screenwriting. Riley lives in Henderson, Nevada. Comanche is his debut novel.
“A clever, imaginative blend of literary fiction, historical
fiction, horror, dark humor, and detective procedural.”— Si Dunn,
Lone Star Literary Life
“Debut novelist Riley tells a quite deliciously twisted tale. The
novel is a lot of fun, with a very entertaining story and a great
cast of characters.”— David Pitt, Booklist
“Brett Riley’s gothic ghost western, Comanche, will delight readers
of both westerns and horror, (his) prose crackles, and at times
reminds of Stephen King or even Zane Grey. Riley employs a quick
pace, with a strong emphasis on the lead protagonist’s character
development, private eye Turner, who spends the novel struggling
with early sobriety." — Stephen Scott Whitaker, The Broadkill
Review
"COMANCHE is the best western-horror-thriller-ghost story-PI novel
ever written."—Tod Goldberg, author of Gangsterland and Gangster
Nation
“A small Texas town, a puffed-up mayor, a couple of down and out
cops, an alluring psychic, and a murdering phantom: what could go
possibly go wrong? ”—Laura McBride, author of We Are Called to Rise
and In the Midnight Room.
"A classic Western for the here and now, delivering redemption
through sacrifice, recovery through bravery and heart.”—Douglas
Unger, author of Leaving the Land and Voices from Silence.
“An atmospheric southern wonderland of guns, grit, bullets, blood
and rip-roaring mystery. Riley’s cast of characters are all a
little good, a little bad, and a little ugly—a perfect mirror for
us all. Saddle up. Hold on tight. And expect no quarter in
Comanche, Texas.”—BJ Hollars, author of Midwestern Strange.
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