He was the most respected gunfighter in the Old West-- The first shots of the Civil War echoed opportunity to young Ben Thompson: the same traits that had earned him notoriety as a civilian -- steady nerves and deadly aim -- could win him respect as a soldier. For a while he found it, riding with the famous Second Regiment, Texas Mounted Rifles. But it was in the murderous gambling dens south of the Rio Grande that Ben Thompson made his reputation.
and the most feared... That reputation would follow him for the rest of his life: as he stared down Wild Bill Hickok in the saloons of Abilene, Kansas, as he battled for control of Colorado's railroads alongside Bat Masterson, and as he cleaned up Austin's streets as a tough-as-nails lawman. He only wanted respect for himself and his family, but it seemed that every cowboy looking to make a name would come looking for Ben Thompson... and it seemed all those names ended up marking fresh graves.
2001 by Jason Manning St. Martin's Press (New York) 248 pp ISBN: 0-312-97980-0
Presented as the autobiography of one of the most colorful gunfighters of the West, and including a fourteen-page author's note, this novel followed quite closely the historical accounts of Ben Thompson's life. Although he was one of the best gunhands in the annals of the frontier, Thompson is not widely remembered. For this reason -- and because of the extraordinary circumstances of his death -- I wanted to introduce him to readers of westerns.