| The
Captive 
 reviewed by Mike Baker Louis Charbonneau wrote one of my favorite action novels Night
  of Violence (aka The Trapped Ones) about a motel and its occupants
  trapped with a desperate criminal fleeing his boss’s wrath and the two hard
  cases sent to kill him. I cannot sing this book’s praises enough. It’s a slim
  taut thriller. Most people know Charbonneau
  for his science fiction, which I’m sure is great but I wouldn’t know because
  I don’t read science fiction. I found out though, in early April, that he
  also wrote westerns under the pseudonym Carter Travis Young. I immediately
  bought five of them. The Captive is
  about freshly married Ter and Jaine Bryant as they optimistically sojourn
  west from Natchez, Louisiana on their way to recently opened California.
  Their wagon train stops at Bent’s Fort where they lose their escort of
  Dragoons and shortly thereafter, Jaine is kidnapped when their train gets
  attacked by the Iron Nose band of Comanches somewhere out on the trail. Ter teams up with the father
  of another white girl stolen by the Comanches and Tom Brock, a black scout
  Ter befriended on the wagon train, and the trio head out to get their kin or
  get their vengeance. Jaine gets raped a lot and then stolen by a
  Cheyenne and raped some more. Meanwhile, mountain man Angus
  Haws loses his Apache squaw Wo-man to a bear attack and, having seen the
  ethereal Jaine Bryant at Bent’s Fort, obsesses about her as he wanders into
  the wilderness pining for a white woman of his very own. Shenanigans ensue. The first act is in real time
  up through the abduction. The second act is a Rocky style montage of events
  over the course of about a year: Ter and Tom became a scout team for the
  Cavalry, Angus buys Jaine from the Cheyenne who murdered Iron Nose and Jaine
  gets raped some more. The third act is in real time as Tom and Ter close in
  on the increasingly more insane Angus and the beleaguered and aggrieved
  Jaine. The writing is crisp and the
  suspense, where the story calls for suspense, is tight. The rapes are low key
  if there’s such a thing as a low-key rape and there’s a lot of them. The
  gun-play and violence is sparce but explosive and effective. | 
| The Captive was originally published as a hardcover in 1973 by Doubleday
  & Co. The edition our intrepid reviewer, Mike Baker, read was the mass
  market edition published by Manor Books. Come back the first Monday of each month
  for Mike Baker’s latest journey into 20th Century paperback fiction.
      | 
 

 
 
No comments:
Post a Comment