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1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

"He thought that this was why he'd become a newsman. Yes. A paper's principle purpose was to report the news and earn a profit, but once in a while, a paper could become a beacon, a lantern, a bonfire for the good."—from the book

It's 1877, and all over the West, frontier towns have sprung up, drawing those in search of new beginnings after the Civil War. The young community of Payday is a paradise of rolling meadows and balmy skies, with a quiet population of ranchers and merchants. Into this Eden comes young editor Sam Flint, whose fledgling newspaper, The Payday Pioneer, earns him friends within the town and trumpets Payday's glories throughout the West.

Sure enough, The Payday Pioneer lures settlers to the town. But to Sam's dismay, they are settlers of the wrong kind. Soon Flint finds himself in the middle of an all-out war for control of the town. Perfect Payday is in danger. But Sam Flint will put his life on the line for what he believes in.

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    • Publisher's Weekly

      November 3, 1997
      Intended as the first book in a trilogy about frontier newspaperman Sam Flint, this uneven novel rewrites the classic western film High Noon for a hero who slings words instead of six-shooters. Sam is a one-man newspaper operation, wandering the Southwest looking for the right town in which to set up his press. Lured to Payday, Ariz., in 1877, he finds an isolated little community hungry to attract new settlers and merchants. His newspaper, the Payday Pioneer, helps bring folks to town, but not without growing pains. Before the decent townspeople know it, a crowd of drifters, tinhorns, gamblers, whores and pistoleros set up shop, led by a blackheart named Odie Racine. The only man willing to stand against Racine's threats is Sam Flint, but his candid reporting makes him a lone, vulnerable target. On the other hand, the only man powerful enough to help save the town is Flint's bitter rival for the hand of beautiful Merry-Grace Rakoczy. In the final showdown, two unlikely allies step beside Sam to face down Racine's gunsels and back-shooters: once the gunsmoke clears, the satisfyingly high body count attests to Wheeler's strong recovery from an occasionally plodding story line. Still, the prolific novelist's third novel this year never lives up to the promise of his terrific Second Lives.

    • AudioFile Magazine
      In 1877 when Flint is invited to establish a newspaper in an idyllic town in the Southwest, he finds himself in the thick of conflicts over the direction of the town's future growth. Incompatible personal ambitions, criminal elements and still raw memories of the Civil War all thicken the mix. Patrick Cullen has a comfortable yarn-spinner's voice and moves the story along effortlessly. He differentiates characters very little and occasionally mispronounces Spanish terms, but these are not serious impediments to the unfolding of an engaging plot. J.N. (c) AudioFile, Portland, Maine

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