| Branded by
  Ed Gorman Berkley,
  2004 
 “He
  wanted to build himself a cigarette, but his hands were covered with the
  woman’s blood. There was something vile about cigarette paper soaked with
  blood.” 
 Branded—which is
  currently available as an ebook from Speaking Volumes—was originally
  published as a paperback original in 2004 by Berkley and (needless to say) it
  didn’t get the play it deserved. Andy Malloy is nineteen
  and preoccupied by the daydreams of youth. Andy, Sir Andrew as he is known in
  the realm, imagines himself a knight of King Arthur’s Court where he is
  brave, just, and admired. But his reality is much different. He works as a
  store clerk, his father is a drunk, and his stepmother, Eileen, is petty and
  unfaithful. Arriving home from work Andy discovers Eileen lying dead on the
  couch, a gunshot wound to her forehead. His father, Tom, is the obvious
  suspect and Andy hides the body until Tom convinces Andy he isn’t the killer.
  The only problem is the Sheriff, a hard man with a reputation for beating and
  killing suspects, doesn’t believe any of it. Branded is
  a superior western novel. It is a heady mixture of character, plot, and
  action. Populated by real people who act and behave, at different times, both
  rationally and irrationally. A town gossip whose only joy is causing trouble,
  a violent lawman with a suspicious background, a town drunk whose personal
  frailty and desire for respect is painful, an isolated woman with a burned
  face. And townspeople who do their best to ignore it. The plot is closer to
  crime, shadows of serial killings no less, than a traditional western and
  there is a satisfying, and surprising climactic twist. But it is also
  appealing as a traditional western and readers of both genres will find much
  to like here. *                      *                      * This is a slightly
  revised version of a review published on June 8, 2016. | 
| Check out Branded on Amazon—click here for the Kindle edition. | 
 

 
 
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