book cover of Thunder God\'s Gold
 

Thunder God's Gold

(1991)
A novel by

 
 
Publisher's Weekly
In this contrived novel, the author of A Man Named Dundee manipulates a hidden vein of gold, greedy desperadoes and other props of the Old West, but provides little in the way of believable characterization. Army surgeon Dr. Ralph Barclay saves the life of an Apache leader's squaw and is rewarded with gold from the Superstition Mountains worth $11,000. But the money and his desire for more doesn't help his failing marriage. His wife Eva, dismayed by Arizona's hardships and her husband's gold-scavenging schemehe plans to ride alone into mountains teeming with renegade Apachesdecides to leave for Boston. His manhood challenged, the doctor gets drunk, flashes around his rolls of cash and stories of more treasure, and is surprised when armed bullies force their way onto his expedition. When they drag Eva to the mountains after the doctor fails to find the hidden bonanza, no surprises ensue. Readers will find it difficult to care about an adventure whose protagonist is so obviously unthinking and whose supporting cast reverses character to support plot convenience.

Library Journal
A tale of greed for gold and the deadly consequences thereof. Ralph Barclay, a young army surgeon in Arizona Territory in 1879, receives gold from a secret lode from an Apache whose wife he has saved. Foolishly, he babbles about it to others, who insist on accompanying him on his search for the gold. Later, Barclay's wife is added to the group as hostage. Resultmurder and mayhem. In spite of Barclay's incredible ineptitude, he and his wife survive, in the process learning that gold is not necessarily the source of happiness. The characters and their actions are just not believable, and the author's style is stilted and awkward. Sister Avila, Acad. of Holy Angels, Minneapolis


Genre: Western

Visitors also looked at these books


Used availability for Leo P Kelley's Thunder God's Gold


About Fantastic Fiction       Information for Authors