The Six-Gun Tarot (Golgotha Book 1)
The Six-Gun Tarot (Golgotha Book 1) book cover

The Six-Gun Tarot (Golgotha Book 1)

Kindle Edition

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Tor Books
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From Booklist Keep an eye on Belcher because if this, his first novel, is any indication, he will be a must-read. The Six-Gun Tarot is nothing short of fantastic: a complex page-turner with philosophical, metaphysical, and mystical underpinnings. Placing his tale in Nevada in 1869, Belcher deftly describes a complex cast of characters and a setting so sharp you can feel the dust in your mouth. Beyond 40-Mile Desert lies Golgotha, a small town that draws its inhabitants from the unnatural: a store owner who talks to the head of his deceased wife, who answers back; a sheriff with the scars of a noose around his neck; a boy with a magical jade eye; and a townswoman who is a member of a group of female assassins. Besides the peculiar townsfolk, there is an evil brewing, and unless the undead Sheriff can defeat it, Golgotha will be no more. --Alison Downs --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title. Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved. The Page of Wandsxa0The Nevada sun bit into Jim Negrey like a rattlesnake. It was noon. He shuffled forward, fighting gravity and exhaustion, his will keeping him upright and moving. His mouth was full of the rusty taste of old fear; his stomach had given up complaining about the absence of food days ago. His hands wrapped around the leather reins, using them to lead Promise ever forward. They were a lifeline, helping him to keep standing, keep walking.Promise was in bad shape. A hard tumble down one of the dunes in the 40-Mile Desert was forcing her to keep weight off her left hind leg. She was staggering along as best she could, just like Jim. He hadn’t ridden her since the fall yesterday, but he knew that if he didn’t try to get up on her and get moving, they were both as good as buzzard food soon. At their present pace, they still had a good three or four days of traveling through this wasteland before they would reach Virginia City and the mythical job with the railroad.Right now, he didn’t care that he had no money in his pockets. He didn’t care that he only had a few tepid swallows of water left in his canteen or that if he managed to make it to Virginia City he might be recognized from a wanted poster and sent back to Albright for a proper hanging. Right now, all he was worried about was saving his horse, the brown mustang that had been his companion since he was a child.Promise snorted dust out of her dark nostrils. She shook her head and slowed.“Come on, girl,” he croaked through a throat that felt like it was filled with broken shale. “Just a little ways longer. Come on.”The mare reluctantly heeded Jim’s insistent tugging on the reins and lurched forward again. Jim rubbed her neck.“Good girl, Promise. Good girl.”The horse’s eyes were wide with crazy fear, but she listened to Jim’s voice and trusted in it.“I’ll get us out of here, girl. I swear I will.” But he knew that was a lie. He was as frightened as Promise. He was fifteen years old and he was going to die out here, thousands of miles from his home and family.They continued on, heading west, always west. Jim knew far ahead of them lay the Carson River, but it might as well be on the moon. They were following the ruts of old wagon train paths, years old. If they had more water and some shelter, they might make it, but they didn’t. The brackish salt ponds they passed spoke to the infernal nature of this place. For days now, they had stumbled over the bleached bones of horses, and worse. Other lost souls, consigned to the waste of the 40-Mile.During the seemingly endless walk, Jim had found artifacts, partially eaten by the sand and clay—the cracked porcelain face of a little girl’s doll. It made him think of Lottie. She’d be seven now. A broken pocket watch held a sun-faded photograph of a stern-looking man dressed in a Union uniform. It reminded him of Pa. Jim wondered if some unfortunate wandering this path in the future would find a token of his and Promise’s passing, the only record of his exodus through this godforsaken land, the only proof that he had ever existed at all.He fished the eye out of his trouser pocket and examined it in the unforgiving sunlight. It was a perfect orb of milky glass. Inlaid in the orb was a dark circle and, within it, a perfect ring of frosted jade. At the center of the jade ring was an oval of night. When the light struck the jade at just the right angle, tiny unreadable characters could be seen engraved in the stone. It was his father’s eye, and it was the reason for the beginning and the end of his journey. He put it back in a handkerchief and stuffed it in his pocket, filled with an angry desire to deny it to the desert. He pressed onward and Promise reluctantly followed.He had long ago lost track of concepts like time. Days were starting to bleed into one another as the buzzing in his head, like angry hornets, grew stronger and more insistent with each passing step. But he knew the sun was more before him now than behind him. He stopped again. When had he stopped to look at the eye? Minutes ago, years? The wagon trails, fossilized and twisting through the baked landscape, had brought him to a crossroads in the wasteland. Two rutted paths crossed near a pile of skulls. Most of the skulls belonged to cattle and coyotes, but the number that belonged to animals of the two-legged variety unnerved Jim. Atop the pile was a piece of slate, a child’s broken and discarded chalkboard, faded by sand, salt and sun. On it, in red paint, written in a crude, looping scrawl were the words: Golgotha: 18 mi. Redemption: 32 mi. Salvation: 50 mi. During Jim’s few furtive days in Panacea, after crossing over from Utah, he had been surprised by the number of Mormons in Nevada and how much influence they had already accumulated in this young state. There were numerous small towns and outposts dotting the landscape with the most peculiar religious names, marking the Mormon emigration west. He had never heard of any of these towns, but if there were people there would be fresh water and shelter from the sun.“See, Promise, only eighteen more miles to go and we’re home free, girl.” He pulled the reins, and they were off again. He didn’t much care for staying in a place named Golgotha, but he was more than willing to visit a spell.The trail continued, the distance measured by the increasing ache in Jim’s dried-out muscles, the growing hum in his head that was obscuring thought. The sun was retreating behind distant, shadowy hills. The relief from the sun was a fleeting victory. Already a chill was settling over his red, swollen skin as the desert’s temperature began to plunge. Promise shivered too and snorted in discomfort. There was only so much farther she could go without rest. He knew it would be better to travel at night and take advantage of the reprieve from the sun, but he was simply too tired and too cold to go on, and he feared wandering off the wagon trail in the darkness and becoming lost.He was looking for a place to hole up for the night when Promise suddenly gave a violent whinny and reared up on her hind legs. Jim, still holding the reins, felt himself jerked violently off the ground. Promise’s injured hind leg gave way and both boy and horse tumbled down a rocky shelf off to the left of the rutted path. There was confusion, and falling and then a sudden, brutal stop. Jim was prone with his back against Promise’s flank. After a few feeble attempts to rise, the horse whimpered and stopped trying.Jim stood, beating the dust off his clothes. Other than a wicked burn on his wrist where the leather reins had torn away the skin, he was unharmed. The small gully they were in had walls of crumbling clay and was sparsely dotted with sickly sage plants. Jim knelt near Promise’s head and stroked the shaking mare.“It’s okay, girl. We both need a rest. You just close your eyes, now. I’ve got you. You’re safe with me.”A coyote howled in the distance, and his brethren picked up the cry. The sky was darkening from indigo to black. Jim fumbled in his saddlebags and removed Pa’s pistol, the one he had used in the war. He checked the cylinder of the .44 Colt and snapped the breech closed, satisfied that it was ready to fire.“Don’t worry, girl; ain’t nobody gitting you tonight. I promised you I’d get us out of here, and I’m going to keep my word. A man ain’t no good for nothing if he don’t keep his word.”Jim slid the coarse army blanket and bedroll off the saddle. He draped the blanket over Promise as best he could, and wrapped himself in the thin bedding. The wind picked up a few feet above their heads, whistling and shrieking. A river of swirling dust flowed over them, carried by the terrible sound. When he had been a boy, Jim had been afraid of the wind moaning, like a restless haint, around the rafters where his bed was nestled. Even though he knew he was a man now and men didn’t cotton to such fears, this place made him feel small and alone.After an hour, he checked Promise’s leg. It was bad, but not so bad yet that it couldn’t heal. He wished he had a warm stable and some oats and water to give her, a clean brush for her hide. He’d settle for the water, though. She was strong, her heart was strong, but it had been days since she had taken in water. Strength and heart only went so far in the desert. From her labored breathing, that wasn’t going to be enough to reach Golgotha.The frost settled into his bones sometime in the endless night. Even fear and the cold weren’t enough to keep him anchored to this world. He slipped into the warm, narcotic arms of sleep.His eyes snapped open. The coyote was less than three feet from his face. Its breath swirled, a mask of silver mist in the space between them. Its eyes were embers in a fireplace. There was intelligence behind the red eyes, worming itself into Jim’s innards. In his mind, he heard chanting, drums. He saw himself as a rabbit—weak, scared, prey.Jim remembered the gun. His frozen fingers fumbled numbly for it on the ground.The coyote narrowed its gaze and showed yellowed teeth. Some were crooked, snagged, but the canines were sharp and straight. You think you can kill me with slow, spiritless lead, little rabbit? Its eyes spoke to Jim. I am the fire giver, the trickster spirit. I am faster than Old Man Rattler, quieter than the Moon Woman’s light. See, go on, see! Shoot me with your dead, empty gun. Jim glanced down at the gun, slid his palm around the butt and brought it up quickly. The coyote was gone; only the fog of its breath remained. Jim heard the coyote yipping in the distance. It sounded like laughter at his expense.His eyes drooped, and closed.He awoke with a start. It was still dark, but dawn was a threat on the horizon. The gun was in his hand. He saw the coyote’s tracks and wondered again if perhaps he had already died out here and was now wandering Hell’s foyer, being taunted by demon dogs and cursed with eternal thirst as penance for the crimes he had committed back home.Promise stirred, fitfully, made a few pitiful sounds and then was still. Jim rested his head on her side. Her heart still beat; her lungs struggled to draw air.If he was in Hell, he deserved it, alone. He stroked her mane and waited for the Devil to rise up, bloated and scarlet in the east. He dozed again.*xa0xa0xa0*xa0xa0xa0*He remembered how strong his father’s hands were, but how soft his voice was too. Pa seldom shouted ’less he had been drinking on account of the headaches.It was a cold West Virginia spring. The frost still clung to the delicate, blooming blue sailors and the cemetery plants early in the morning, but, by noon, the sky was clear and bright and the blustery wind blowing through the mountains was more warm than chill.Pa and Jim were mending some of Old Man Wimmer’s fences alongside their own property. Pa had done odd jobs for folk all over Preston County since he had come back from the war. He had even helped build onto the Cheat River Saloon over in Albright, the closest town to the Negrey homestead.Lottie had brought a lunch pail over to them: corn muffins, a little butter and some apples as well as a bucket of fresh water. Lottie was five then, and her hair was the same straw color as Jim’s, only lighter, more golden in the sunlight. It fell almost to her waist, and Momma brushed it with her fine silver combs in the firelight at night before bedtime. The memory made Jim’s heart ache. It was what he thought of whenever he thought of home.“Is it good, Daddy?” Lottie asked Pa. He was leaning against the fence post, eagerly finishing off his apple.“M’hm.” He nodded. “Tell your ma, these doings are a powerful sight better than those sheet-iron crackers and skillygallee old General Pope used to feed us, darling.”Jim took a long, cool draw off the water ladle and looked at Pa, sitting there, laughing with Lottie. Jim thought he would never be able to be as tall or proud or heroic as Billy Negrey was to him. The day Pa had returned from the war, when President Lincoln said it was over and all the soldiers could go home, was the happiest day of Jim’s young life. Even though Pa came back thin, and Momma fussed over him to eat more, and even though he had the eye patch and the headaches that came with it, that only made him seem more mysterious, more powerful, to Jim.Lottie watched her father’s face intently while he finished off the apple, nibbling all around the core“Was it Gen’ral Pope that took away your eye?” she asked.Pa laughed. “I reckon in a matter of speaking he did, my girl. Your old daddy didn’t duck fast enough, and he took a bullet right in the eye. Don’t complain, though. Other boys, they got it hundred times worse.”“Pa, why does Mr. Campbell in town say you got a Chinaman’s eye?” Jim asked with a sheepish smile.“Now, James Matherson Negrey, you know good and well why.” He looked from one eager face to the other and shook his head. “Don’t you two ever get tired of hearing this story?”They both shook their heads, and Billy laughed again.“Okay, okay. When I was serving with General Pope, my unit—the First Infantry out of West Virginia—we were in the middle of this big ol’ fight, y’see—”“Bull Run? Right, Pa?” Jim asked. He already knew the answer, and Billy knew he knew.“Yessir,” Billy said. “Second scrap we had on the same piece of land. Anyways, old General Pope, he made some pretty bad calculations and—”“How bad, Pa?” Lottie asked.“Darling, we were getting catawamptiously chawed up.”The children laughed, like they always did.Billy continued. “So the call comes for us to fall back, and that was when Ixa0… when I got a Gardner right square in the eye. I was turning my head to see if old Luther Potts was falling back when it hit me. Turning my head probably saved my life.”Billy rubbed the bridge of his nose with his thumb and forefinger.“You all right, Pa?” Jim asked.“Fine, Jim. Fetch me some water, will you? So, Lottie, where was I?”“You got shot in the eye.”“Right. So I don’t recall much specific after that. I was in a lot of pain. I heardxa0… well, I could hear some of what was going on all around me.”“Like what, Pa?” she asked.“Never you mind. Anyways, someone grabbed me up, and dragged me for a spell, and finally I heard the sawbones telling someone to hold me still, and they did and I went to sleep for a long time. I dreamed about you and Jim and your mother. The stuff they give you to sleep makes you have funny dreams. I remember seeing someone all dressed up fancy in green silk, some kind of old man, but his hair was long like a woman’s, and he was jawing at me, but I couldn’t understand him.”“When did you wake up, Pa?” Jim asked. Even though he knew the story by heart, he always tried to flesh it out with any new details that he could glean from the retelling.“Few days later in a hospital tent. My head hurt bad and it was kind of hard to think or hear.” Billy paused and seemed to wince. Jim handed him the wooden ladle full of cool water. He gulped it down and blinked a few times with his good eye. “They told me we had fallen back and were on our way to Washington for garrison duty. General Pope was in a powerful lot of trouble too.“They told me I had lost the eye, but was mighty lucky to be alive. I didn’t feel too lucky right that minute, but compared to all the lads who didn’t come home at all, I figure I did have an angel on my shoulder.”“So tell us about the Chinaman, Pa!” Lottie practically squealed.Billy winced but went on, with a forced smile. “Well, when my unit got to Washington, a bunch of us fellas who were pretty banged up, we all went to stay at a hospital. One night in the hospital, this strange little Johnny, all dressed up in his black pajamas, and his little hat, he came sneaking into the ward and he crept up beside my bed.”“Were you scared, Pa?” Jim asked.Billy shook his head. “Not really, Jim. That hospital was so strange. The medicine they gave us, called it morphine, it made you feel all flushed and crazy. I honestly didn’t think the Chinaman was real. He spoke to me and his voice was like a song, but soft, like I was the only one in the world who could hear him. He said, ‘You will do.’ I don’t to this day know what the blazes he was going on about, but he said something about the moon and me hiding or some-such. Then he touched me right here, on the forehead, and I fell asleep.“Well, when I woke up I wasn’t in the hospital anymore; I was in some den of Chinamen. They were all mumbling something or other over top of me, and they were pulling these great big knitting needles outta my skin, but I didn’t feel any pain at all. The one who came into the hospital and fetched me, he said that they were healers and that they had come to give me a gift. He held up a mirror and I saw the eye for the first time. He told me it was an old keepsake from his kin back in China.”“Did you believe him, Pa?” Jim asked.Billy rubbed his temples and blinked at the afternoon sunlight again. “Well, I was a mite suspicious of him and his buddies, Jim. He told me the eye was real valuable, and that I should probably hide it under a patch, ’less crooks might try to steal it. That seemed a bit odd to me. He and the other Johnnies, they all chattered like parrots in that singsong talking those folks do. I couldn’t understand any of it, but they all seemed powerful interested in me and the eye. Then they thanked me and told me good luck. Another Chinaman blew smoke in my face from one of those long pipes of theirs, and I got sleepy and kind of dizzy and sick, like with the morphine. When I woke up, I was back in the hospital, and it was the next day. I told the doctors and my superior officer what happened, and they just seemed to chalk it up to the medicine they gave me. They had more trouble explaining the eye. The hospital was pretty crazy on account of all the hurt soldiers. They didn’t have much time to puzzle over my story—I was alive and was going to keep on living. They had to move on the next poor fella. Couple of them offered to buy the eye right out of my head, but it didn’t seem proper to give away such a fine gift. And it gave me a great story to tell my kids for the rest of my life.”Billy grunted, and pulled himself to his feet. “A while later, the war was over and I got to come home. I never saw the Chinaman again. The end.”“Let me see it, Pa!” Lottie said eagerly, practically humming with anticipation. “Please!”Billy smiled and nodded. He lifted the plain black eye patch that covered his left socket. Lottie laughed and clapped. Jim crowded forward too to get a better glimpse of the seldom-seen artifact.“It’s like you got a green-colored eye,” Lottie said softly. “It’s so pretty, Pa.”“That green color in it, that’s jade,” Billy said. “Lots of jade in China.”“Tea too,” Jim added.Lottie stuck out her tongue at him. “You’re just trying to be all highfalutin and smart seeming,” she said.“All right, you two, that’s enough,” Billy said, lowering the patch. “Let’s get back to work, Jim. Lottie, you run on home to your momma, y’hear?”Jim watched Lottie dance through the tall, dry grass, empty pail in her small hand, the sun glistening off her golden curls. She was singing a made-up song about China and jade. She pronounced “jade” “jay.”Jim glanced to his father, and he could tell that one of the headaches was coming on him hard. But he was smiling through it, watching Lottie too. He turned to regard his thirteen-year-old son with a look that made the sun shine inside the boy’s chest.“Let’s get back to it, Son.”*xa0xa0xa0*xa0xa0xa0*He awoke, and it was the desert again. The green and the mountain breeze were gone. The sun was coiled in the east, ready to rise up into the air and strike. It was still cool, but not cold anymore. He remembered the coyote and spun around, gun in hand. Everything was still and unchanged in the gathering light.Promise’s breathing was labored and soft. The sound of it scared Jim, bad. He tried to get her to rise, but the horse shuddered and refused to stir.“Come on, girl, we got to get moving, ’fore that sun gets any higher.”Promise tried to rise, coaxed by the sound of his voice. She failed. He looked at her on the ground, her dark eyes filled with pain, and fear, and then looked to the gun in his hand.“I’m sorry I brought you out here, girl. I’m so sorry.”He raised Pa’s pistol, cocked it and aimed it at the mare’s skull.“I’m sorry.” His finger tightened on the trigger. His hands shook. They hadn’t done that when he shot Charlie. Charlie had deserved it; Promise didn’t.He eased the hammer down and dropped the gun into the dust. He stood there for a long time. His shadow lengthened.“We’re both getting out of here, girl,” he said, finally.Jim rummaged through the saddlebags and removed his canteen. He took a final, all-too-brief sip of the last of the water, and then poured the rest onto Promise’s mouth and over her swollen tongue. The horse eagerly struggled to take the water in. After a few moments, she rose to her feet, shakily.Jim stroked her mane. “Good girl, good girl. We’ll make it together, or not at all. Come on.” They began to trudge, once again, toward Golgotha.xa0Copyright © 2013 by Rod Belcher --This text refers to an alternate kindle_edition edition. “Belcher draws readers into a fascinating world that reads like a mashup of Buffy the Vampire Slayer and Deadwood . Part western, part urban fantasy, part coming-of-age tale, Belcher's story balances all pieces perfectly.” ― RT Book Reviews “Against the backdrop of Chinese and Mormon mythology and the Civil War, with a bit of Frankenstein for color, the mix of theology, frontier justice, and zombies is merely cover for an intense and irreverent exploration of good, evil, and free will.” ― Publishers Weekly, starred review “A jaw-dropping first novel that explodes across genre lines. Wild, gritty, insanely inventive and a hell of a lot of fun!” ― Jonathan Maberry, New York Times bestselling author of Dust & Decay and Assassin's Code “A steampunk'd romp through a Mythic West drenched in blood and magic.” ― Rosemary Edghill, coauthor of The Shadow of Albion “If you want to see what Weird Westerns are all about, there's no better place to start than The Six-Gun Tarot .” ― Mike Resnick, award-wining author of Santiago --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title. ROD BELCHER won the Grand Prize in the Strange New Worlds SF-writing contest. He runs Cosmic Castle, a comic book shop in Roanoke, Virginia. The Six-Gun Tarot is his first novel. --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title. Read more

Features & Highlights

  • Six-Gun Tarot
  • is the first book in the twisted weird west world of the Golgotha series by R.S. Belcher.
  • Nevada, 1869:
  • Beyond the pitiless 40-Mile Desert lies Golgotha, a cattle town that hides more than its share of unnatural secrets. The sheriff bears the mark of the noose around his neck; some say he is a dead man whose time has not yet come. His half-human deputy is kin to coyotes. The mayor guards a hoard of mythical treasures. A banker's wife belongs to a secret order of assassins. And a shady saloon owner, whose fingers are in everyone's business, may know more about the town's true origins than he's letting on.A haven for the blessed and the damned, Golgotha has known many strange events, but nothing like the primordial darkness stirring in the abandoned silver mine overlooking the town. Bleeding midnight, an ancient evil is spilling into the world, and unless the sheriff and his posse can saddle up in time, Golgotha will have seen its last dawn…and so will all of Creation.R.S. Belcher's
  • The Six-Gun Tarot
  • is "an astonishing blend of first-rate steampunk fantasy and Western adventure." (
  • Library Journal
  • , Starred Review)Other Books by R.S. Belcher:The Golgotha SeriesThe Six-Gun TarotThe Shotgun ArcanaNightwiseThe Brotherhood of the WheelAt the Publisher's request, this title is being sold without Digital Rights Management Software (DRM) applied.

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
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★★★
15%
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★★
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Most Helpful Reviews

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Has potential, but also many issues

This is a difficult one to rate. Three stars usually means I didn't enjoy it much, but for a long time I was enjoying it. However, when I got about two-thirds of the way through, the horror elements became more dominant. Since I don't like anything more than mild horror, and I was starting to be ready for it to be over anyway, I stopped reading at that point.

Early on, I felt that, despite some notable editing issues, it had the potential to be great (or rather, that the author did). I still think that potential is there, with the right developmental editor and a better copy editor. It's not just the same old tired tropes, though it gets a little tropey when it brings in bits of Mythos (there's even a sly mention of the King in Yellow). At the same time, there's some freshness to it, and a sense of depth - though I felt, on reflection, that the author might have been trying too hard to achieve depth and ended up merely with complexity.

I mentioned the copy editing. A good number of the problems are sloppy typing: missing quotation marks or other punctuation, missing words, fumbled words (like "clam" for "calm"), the kind of thing you would once have blamed a typesetter for back when there were such people, but which must now be blamed on the author. There are also a good few examples of using the wrong word, though: "filament" for "firmament", "proscribed" for "prescribed" (though I've seen Samuel Delaney make that mistake, so Belcher is in good company there), "taunt" for "taut", "shorn" for "shored", "utterance" for something written down, "willing to sate the most jaded pleasures" (instead of "appetites").

The prose sometimes purples to the point of incomprehensibility: "a flute made out of a human femur rattlesnake whirred an ice-knife tune up and down his spine", which is also a thoroughly mixed metaphor. People know things they couldn't know. There's head-hopping. There's a direct commuter line to the Department of Backstory, and it's used on every possible occasion.

Notwithstanding all this, the potential is there. The cosmic significance, and at the same time the authentic Western feel, and the two not seeming at odds - that indicates talent. I feel the same sort of thing has been done better, though, notably by S.A. Hunt.
15 people found this helpful
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Just awesome, great Lovecraftian, steampunk-influenced Weird Western

Book Info: Genre: Weird Western
Reading Level: Adult (although one of the main characters, Jim, is 15 and his coming-of-age is part of the story, I still think it's more of an adult story)
Recommended for: Fans of Lovecraftian literature, Weird Westerns, urban Fantasy
Trigger Warnings: murder, domestic violence against wife and daughter, slavery (during the part set prior to the civil war)
Animals Injured: Horse injures leg badly, had to push on through desert with no water for days (she's okay); two coyotes killed after they attack

My Thoughts: While at DragonCon 2013, I spent a good bit of time in the dealers' rooms looking at books and talking to authors. One of the books I noticed was The Six-Gun Tarot, a steampunk-influenced Weird Western with strong Lovecraftian ties. As it turned out, the author—R.S. Belcher—was there at the time and took a few moments to talk to me about the book. While I didn't buy a copy right then (as I've been spending profligately enough and my bag was full to bursting), I did note it and put it onto my wishlist as soon as I came home that night. Finally I picked it up this winter with some of the many gift certificates various friends sent me to help cheer me up after my cancer diagnosis.

Some of the imagery in this is pretty amazing (especially the Lovecraftian bits), like this rant from a madman:
“You don't know what they do up there on that mountain, do you, Sheriff? It's tossing and turning. It eats the heart of the world, like a worm burrowing an apple! Maybe the preacher's right and my faith is just shivering, weak—is it wrong for me to try to keep them from hollowing me out from inside? I should just blow all of you stupid bastards back to Kingdom Come, while it's still there! Before they burn down Heaven and feast on the corpse. Maybe we should all die now, better that way!”
Then we have Gran Bonny, whose ideas are blasphemous and often extremely funny, like this one:
“Guns are like men—only useful for a little while. They can go off at a moment's notice when you don't want them to and they make a lot of damn fool noise doing it.”
The blasphemous part comes here:
“The tyrant-father of Heaven, the one who created, hated and drove out the first woman, yoked men with a horrible curse, far worse than any imagined to have been handed down to Eve. Men were told they were masters of this world, of their mates, of the beasts and fish, of the land and sea and sky. How ridiculous! That's like telling a little boy he's in charge of the house when his da is gone. It's silly!

"And like that little boy, men have tried to live up to the unreasonable demands of their mute, wayward, celestial father. They have enslaved and dominated, conquered and killed, all in the name of shepherding, of protecting, of ruling the world. They spend their lives trying to do what they think is right, what their father on high would want of them. The bastard.”
I really like the use of Lilith in the history of this world, and the idea of the Load. I wish we had spent more time with Gran Bonny, heard more of her stories. That would actually be a pretty cool spin-off series—give us Gran Bonny's life story! But I digress...

As I said, I really liked how Lilith is presented in this book, and the handing down of Her secret purpose (the Load) over the generations as protectors of the Earth and the Mother. “I am the Mother's blade, the Mother's wrath... You have poisoned her, raped her and her children. Left her to die. Now you will suffer, you will die.” Really hardcore stuff, you know?

This is set in Nevada shortly after the Civil War. There is (of course) a lot of strife with the Native American peoples, and the Mormon/Latter Day Saints were a fairly new religion. Most of the more wealthy people who live in Golgotha in the book are Mormons, and I was startled by how much and how often most of the ones we spend any time with in the story drank. The only character who paid any respect to the rules was Sarah, who offered Harry coffee, even though it was a sin. My understanding is that Mormons are not supposed to drink alcohol or caffeine, or smoke, or otherwise pollute their bodies with drugs of any kind. That doesn't necessarily mean that is what happens, of course, but a lot of the drinking was being done by fairly high-ranking and prominent individuals and it surprised me that they didn't at least try to hide it. While this is the first book in the series, events from the past are frequently referred to (and I hope someday the author will write some of these prequels). It is also obvious that people who live in Golgotha are aware of the weirdness and danger in the area, especially the sheriff. Check out his armory:
“He [Jon] cleaned and oiled the collection of rifles, scatterguns and pistols that were caged in iron bars behind his desk. He also made sure the other objects locked in the gun cage—wooden stakes, silver bullets, various Indian and Chinese charms and amulets, a crucifix and several vials of holy water, blessed by the Holy Father himself all the way from Rome—were all in equally good condition.
As you can see, Jon is ready for just about anything the town can throw at him, and I for one would love to know some of the stories of how and why.

For those readers who are familiar with the tarot, each chapter heading is a card's name, and either refers to a person or event in that chapter. I think it would be cool if a tarot deck was created to match this universe. As it is, those familiar with the cards and their meanings can have some fun by working out how the specific card applies to any given chapter.

Fans of Lovecraftian stories, Weird Westerns, and urban fantasies should enjoy this book. I really enjoyed reading it; it held me engrossed right to the end, and I highly recommend it to anyone who might be interested.

Series Information: Golgotha Series
Book 1: The Six-Gun Tarot
Book 2: The Shotgun Arcana, expected publication October 7, 2014 by Tor

Disclosure: I bought this book for myself after seeing it and talking to the author about it at DragonCon last fall. All opinions are my own.

Synopsis: Buffy meets Deadwood in a dark, wildly imaginative historical fantasy

Nevada, 1869: Beyond the pitiless 40-Mile Desert lies Golgotha, a cattle town that hides more than its share of unnatural secrets. The sheriff bears the mark of the noose around his neck; some say he is a dead man whose time has not yet come. His half-human deputy is kin to coyotes. The mayor guards a hoard of mythical treasures. A banker’s wife belongs to a secret order of assassins. And a shady saloon owner, whose fingers are in everyone’s business, may know more about the town’s true origins than he’s letting on.

A haven for the blessed and the damned, Golgotha has known many strange events, but nothing like the primordial darkness stirring in the abandoned silver mine overlooking the town. Bleeding midnight, an ancient evil is spilling into the world, and unless the sheriff and his posse can saddle up in time, Golgotha will have seen its last dawn… and so will all of Creation.
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First Rate Genre-Bender

Six-Gun Tarot is a great novel hampered by a classic first novel problem--it is too ambitious and tries to do far too much. For a single novel checking in at under 400 pages, Belcher draws in elements from genres as disparate and wide ranging as cosmic fantasy, Lovecraftian horror, western, steampunk, and weird. He gives us a host of characters, none of whom qualifies as the main character, but all of whom get distinct backstories, motivations, and, more distressingly, plotlines. The underlying philosophical and theological implications are meant to be serious and open-ended, and they are, but Belcher draws from so many influences--mainstream Christian theology, Mormonism, Judaism, Eastern philosophy, Native American beliefs, and Lovecraftian mythology, at the least--and gives enough conflicting information that the final effect is overly confused.

In the world of Six-Gun Tarot, when God said "Let there be light," something was already there. That something wound up chained in the bowels of the earth, a fact that not unexpectedly will wind up mattering quite a bit to the thoroughly odd little town in post-Civil War Nevada where the story takes place called Golgotha (it's biblical). The characters include a boy named Jim who carries his dead father's magical glass eye and has a price on his head, a sheriff who can't be killed and has the noose scars on his neck to prove it, a deputy whose half-Coyote with a big C, a banker's wife whose trained as an assassin, and, well, it goes on like that for a while. Then things really get weird.

Six-Gun Tarot may try to do too much, but it pretty much everything it does it does very well. I had a hard time putting it down after I picked it up, and it left me thinking after I finished it. The characters have depth, the action is fast-paced (although this is by no means an action-heavy book), and there is an ever present growing sense of dread before things really go to h***.

Disclosure: I received an advance e-copy of Six-Gun Tarot through NetGalley.
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Looking for a good alt western? Nothing to see here.

Full disclosure - I stopped at 45% completed. Spoilers!!! I stopped at the tentacle porn. Other reviewers said there was a lot going on, but what they meant is, "too much."

Heavenly conflict, steampunk Frankenstein-like whatever it is, Cthulu, were-something Indian myth, secret societies, gay cowboys. It's got it all crammed in to a confusing digital sausage that suffers for it. The POV changes from the (what you think is the main character) Jim so awkwardly that you'll find yourself confused about whose story this is. The prose is full of Wild West sayings, curses, and slang that pull you out of the story as you try to decipher them.

If you are of Chinese decent you'll love the insane amount of racism directed towards early Chinese American immigrants. Top notch stuff there. But don't worry, every chapter or so someone says something akin to "they aren't that bad" or "some of the guys I know are Chinese."

The concept and plot are an idea I can get behind, but the story is just too bloated. Relegating some of the POV characters to the background would have given the author more time to explore the more intriguing ones.
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Great Debut

Let me just start this review by saying that I normally hate westerns. Also, I normally hate it when western & steampunk collide, but the author did a wonderful job of blending them in a way that I actually enjoyed, and after reading, couldn't have imagined one without the other. I liked the entire town of Golgotha & the blend of eclectic people who made up its population. I loved that he included a strong female character, and I would love to see a whole book devoted to just her at some point, as well as a whole book devoted to one of the other story lines (we'll just call it a love triangle that's "well preserved") that I loved so much I don't even want to mention in this review for fear of spoilage. All in all, I think it's a great debut novel. And to all of those people writing in their reviews that the author is trying to put too much into this one book...I don't see it that way at all. It looks to me like he's just setting up all of the different lines of dominos, to make one cool looking piece of art when we see them working all together and depending on each other to fall when the time is right.
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Good characters, plus yet another Apocalypse

I’ve read a lot of good fantasy-westerns (sometimes with steampunk elements) lately, and I hoped that this would be another one. For the most part it is, though I didn’t like it nearly as well as the best of the others, such as Elizabeth Bear’s Karen Memory. There’s no steampunk in this one, with one exception that’s not developed in much detail; instead, it has an occult focus, with the bad guys trying to raise the ultimate demonic force of what Milton called “chaos and old night.” Again.

The best part of this book, in my opinion, was the characters. I got very fond of Maude, the banker’s wife, recipient of an impressive female heritage, and of Mutt, the insultingly but by no means inaccurately named deputy sheriff. Jim, the young man who carries a strange legacy from his dead father; Augie and Gillian, a middle-aged couple developing love after great loss; Holly, the frustrated wife of the secretly-gay mayor; and Jon Highfather, the sheriff with the rather-too-obvious name, were also enjoyable. The author slowed my bonding with these people, however, by switching among them so frequently in different chapters.

The writing was very good, particularly in its similes and metaphors. Here, for instance, is the book’s first line: “The Nevada sun bit into Jim Negrey like a rattlesnake…. His mouth was full of the rusty taste of old fear.” And shortly afterward: “The pain was thick and settled over his skull like lead syrup.” The plot moves along briskly, too, albeit somewhat jerkily because of all the changes in point of view, and there is plenty of action and suspense.

My only quarrel with the book was that I think the Apocalypse/Ultimate Chaos Demon (here it’s called the Greate Olde Wurm) theme has been used way too much lately (maybe I’ve just seen too many TV shows like Sleepy Hollow), and this author didn’t really do anything new with it. I’m also not quite sure where his theology ends up: the chaos creature is clearly the Ultimate Bad, but its opposite, presented as more or less like the Judeo-Christian deity, is not portrayed very kindly either. The female side of divinity occupies a pivotal, but not entirely clear, role between them.

I haven’t decided whether I’ll rejoin the occupants of Golgotha for the sequel, Shotgun Arcana, but if you like “Weird West” stories and don’t mind yet one more apocalypse, I recommend that you give this first book a try.
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Single Best First Novel I Have Read in a Long Time

This is simply the best first novel and one of the top 10 best novels that I have read in a long time. It combines so many different religions & mythologies & weird elements & the Wild West into such a tasty stew that I was simply amazed when I saw that it was a first novel. Other reviewers will give you spoilers. All I will say is W O W and buy this now!!

Thank you, Memphis Public Library, for having it available.
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I really wanted to give it 4 or 5 stars, but I can't.

It was a fun story with interesting (though in some cases not well developed) characters. It is a good first novel, and I think the writer has great potential. I would recommend it to anybody who enjoys the Weird Western sub-genre. I am going to order the sequel today. So why not a 4 or 5 then?

1. Inconsistent prose quality - There are some great lines and moving passages, but it has its share of eye-rollers as well.

2. This guy REAALLYYY likes flashbacks - In my opinion the biggest flaw with the book is large amounts of unnecessary back story inserted in clumsy ways (most often flashbacks). There were a couple of points when I was really into the story then BOOM annoying flashback right in the middle of the scene. Without this it would have been a 4 easy.

3. Slightly disappointing ending - I don't want to go into it because well ..... spoilers. It was good but for me it didn't quite meet the expectation I had built up in my head.

4. Too many POV characters for a book this length - because of that some really interesting subplots didn't get the attention they deserved. I felt like the Augie/Gert/Clay/Gillian story could have been a book all its own.

In summary, I would recommend without hesitation to weird western fans, but probably not to fantasy fans in general.
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Weeeeeeee!

This book has everything! Cowboys, Indians, Witches, Mad Scientists, ass Kicking Mormans, Angels and Demons and tentacle rape! A must read, please write us another Belcher!
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Interesting concept, but scattershot

The setting is interesting, and it's a relatively fresh take on Mythos-y stuff. But there's no strong voice, too many characters that are never really given any depth, and the writing is uneven.
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