
When Buchanan rescues a young woman after being raped, he doesn’t realize that he is getting in the middle of a violent clash between two powerful families, one on either side of the US/Mexican border. Returning the girl to her family, Buchanan heads north to Agrytown, where he meets the young girl’s brother, Juan, who is hell bent on revenge. But when Buchanan lends a helping hand, he winds up in jail with Juan, and on the bad side of the greedy, backstabbing Agry family. With danger all around him, Buchanan must figure out how to save his and Juan’s necks while avoiding the wrath of the Agry clan.

Buchanan is a classic example of the Western anti-hero – a hired gun with a mysterious past who rides into town as the story begins, and rides out when it ends. Trouble is never more than an arm’s length away, and excitement seems to follow Buchanan wherever he may roam. The girls like him, and the men (at least the honorable ones) respect him even more. While we get hints about his past as a hired gun for the Mexican Revolution, it is clear that his days as a gunman are behind him. His code of ethics is more noble than any law book, but he’s not indignant about morality. He helps the underdog, never takes advantage of anyone, never shoots anyone in the back, and won’t sell himself out for any price. How can you not be charmed a guy like that?
Before dying too young at the age of 37 from cancer, William Ard completed four more Buchanan novels: Buchanan Says No, One-Man Massacre, Buchanan Gets Mad, and Buchanan’s Revenge. A fifth, Buchanan on the Prod, was completed after his death by Robert Silverberg. Brian Garfield did one and then William R. Cox took over the series and it continued until 1986. For more information, check out Mystery File and this William Ard website created by Dennis Miller.

Here are three quotes that I particularly liked:
“His fists beat down remorselessly on that face below him, watched it change shape, felt the bones snap, stopped hitting only when he was too arm-weary and knuckle-sore to continue.”
“The big .45 came clear and jumped and roared death in Juan’s slim hands until there was no more vengeance in it. Even then the smooth-working hammer clicked three times on empty shell cases.”
“The little gun with the big caliber rocked the room with sound. Three times the Colt gave answer. Then it, like everything else, was quiet.”
I liked the Randolph Scott version, but Buchanan always reminded me of Cheyenne Bodie and I would have liked to see Clint Walker play him. Garfield did only one Buchanan, BUCHANAN'S GUN, and the rest are by William R. Cox. I recall thinking the books by Ard were great, the rest of the series enjoyable but not on the same level. I haven't read any of them in years, though, so mine is not the most well-informed opinion.
ReplyDeleteI also thought of Clint Walker when I read the book’s description of Buchanan. Or maybe Chuck Connors.
DeleteThanks for that info, James. I fixed the post to include William R. Cox.
ReplyDeleteLooks like CHEYENNE is on DVD -- I'll look for it at my local video store.
Scott and Boetticher were a great combination. I didn't know about this film.
ReplyDeleteI bought about ten Buchanan books at a book sale once and read this one. It was OK but not good enough to make me immediately devour the others I'd brought home.
ReplyDeleteI saw your Jonas Ward stuff this morning. It may not be generally known that I wrote most of BUCHANAN ON THE PROD, working from a fragment that William Ard left behind. (We had the same agent.) Westerns, of course, were never a specialty of mine, and I doubt that the book stacks up very well against Ard's own work, but I gave it a good try.
ReplyDeleteRobert Silverberg
I think that you need to change the age from 37 to 87, but I enjoyed this article.
ReplyDeleteMaybe my information is incorrect. How many people wrote Buchanan westerns?
ReplyDeleteFour people wrote Buchanan novels that I know of: William Ard (who was indeed 37 when he died), Robert Silverberg (completed a novel that Ard had started), Brian Garfield, and William R. Cox who wrote more of them than all the others combined, I think.
ReplyDelete