Incident in a Ghost Town

by Brad Prowse


Formats

Softcover
£9.75
Softcover
£9.75

Book Details

Language : English
Publication Date : 23/06/2000

Format : Softcover
Dimensions : 5x8
Page Count : 156
ISBN : 9781587212062

About the Book

Incident in a Ghost Town borders on science fiction, in that it involves time-travel. Only, the travel is back in time and no real science is involved. So 'fantasy' might be a better word for the story.

In it, a modern-day Nevada rancher, Lang Crawford, while out riding, is caught up in a strange storm that renders him unconscious. When he awakes, he finds himself in the company of a group of men dressed as 1860s cavalrymen. He takes them to be 'reenactors,' men who dress as bygone soldiers for amusement. They in turn, take him to be a renegade white man, in cahoots with hostile Indians.

It is finally established that both Lang and the troopers have been moved from their own times to 1932 - but why? Lang suggests they retire to the deserted ghost town of Rawhide, not far distant, where they can ponder the situation. However, Rawhide turns out to be inhabited by Depression-era miners, in dispute with the owners of Rawhide's old mines.

The rest of the story involves Lang's affair with the sister of one of the miners, why they have been brought to Rawhide, and how to return to their own times...if they can, if, indeed, it all wasn't a dream.


About the Author

Brad Prowse has had a life-long love for, and interest in, America's 'Wild West.' He began writing magazine articles on this theme in the early 1970's and he has written for True West, Western Horseman, American Cowboy and like publications as well as furnishing a local newspaper with two monthly columns.

The author was traveling across the high desert country of Nevada some years ago. As he drove, moving through old ghost towns and by the ruins of Pony Express stations, the germ of a story was formed. It blended the Old West, modern days (1980's) and the 1930's into a story that takes place in the old Nevada ghost town on Rawhide, today a ruin.

This inspiration-along with some old records, a diary and personal investigation, resulted in what the author calls a fantasy-adventure. It is an action story but a romance, too.