Bohannon's Country: Mystery Stories

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Viking, 1993 - Fiction - 174 pages
"There is no one quite like Joseph Hansen writing mystery stories these days. Hansen, the celebrated author of twelve novels featuring his gay detective, Dave Brandstetter, and winner of the 1992 Lambda Award for his last novel, A Country of Old Men, here weighs in with five superb stories of detection, all set on the rugged California central coast, where death is as dramatic and unpredictable as the landscape. Here Hack Bohannon, an ex-sheriff, keeps horses he owns, as well as some for other people, and solves crimes on the side. The inspiration for Bohannon came to Hansen, as he says in his graceful introduction to this volume, from his boyhood admiration of such Hollywood cowboys as Ken Maynard, Buck Jones, and Hoot Gibson. "I never lost the hankering to write westerns." He does them with flair and feeling in these long and varied stories, three of them featuring Bohannon and his crew - the grizzled ex-rodeo rider George Stubbs, the young student priest Manuel Rivera, Lieutenant Gerard, and Gerard's attractive young woman deputy, T. Hodges. Along the way the Bohannon gang discover that death can be dramatic and unpredictable. One non-Bohannon story in this collection features an old man in need of help, who fantasizes that Donald, the son he never had, has finally come to him. Or is it fantasy? Another story, "Molly's Aim," concerns the consequences of a passionate attachment one man feels for another, and how it impacts on the life of the story's central character, Molly Byrne, whose life was changed forever by her relationship with one of these men. But you pick your own favorite Joseph Hansen tale from this first-rate collection, stories that are muscled and supple and full of the wisdom and writing magic that this fine author has accumulated over the years."--BOOK JACKET.Title Summary field provided by Blackwell North America, Inc. All Rights Reserved

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About the author (1993)

Joseph Hansen was born in Aberdeen, South Dakota, on July 19, 1923. He attended Pasasdena City College. Hansen's fiction began to appear in the 60s. He published under the pseudonym James Colton because of the homosexual characters and themes of his work. He had published five novels and a collection of short stories when "Fadeout," the first of the Brandstetter mystery novels, was released. It is this series of 12 novels, which was published from 1970 to 1991 for which Hansen was most well known. Hansen wrote almost 40 books, which included novels and a series of semi-autobiographical works. He also taught fiction workshops, published poems in The New Yorker and produced a local radio show in the 60s called "Homosexuality Today." In 1965 he founded the pioneering homosexual journal Tangents. In 1974 Hansen was awarded a grant by the National Endowment for the Arts, and in 1992 he won the lifetime achievement award from the Private Eye Writers of America. Joseph Hansen died on November 24, 2004 at the age of 81 from heart failure.

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