This novel opens with Asa Delaware, well-known town tamer, about to take on his latest project. Ludlow, Texas is being run by a group of rowdy and violent cowhands, but the town has hired Asa and his sawed-off shotgun to “resolve” the problem. Together with his son, a poetry loving strategic thinker, and his daughter, a danger-loving crack-shot, they rapidly fix the problem, leaving no baddie alive. There is enough action and well-written gun play here to satisfactorily fill most standard western novels, but all this comprises only the first third of the book.
The bulk of the novel is taken with the trio’s operations in the fictional town of Ordville, Colorado, having been hired by a victim instead of the town council. This is a different situation than they’ve faced before. No violent power-wielding thugs or shoot-outs in the streets here, but rather a peaceful, and amazingly prosperous town that the citizens love. Digging deeper though, Asa discovers a hidden puppet master who controls the town’s wealth, the local law, and has anybody who gets in his way brutally beaten or killed. Worse, the three town tamers have no protection from authorities to cover for their typically lethal methods. What unfolds is a masterful display of strategy, cunning, and unfolding tension.
Asa Delaware is a fascinating character and the author does an excellent job of balancing the bits and pieces of his backstory and characterization with edge-of-your-seat action. Robbins displays a talent for making a wildly over-the-top adventure seem perfectly logical and for keeping the reader completely engaged from the first chapter through the last. It’s no surprise that this book, rests easily in the high-quality pantheon of David Robbin’s portfolio.