cover image Butch Cassidy: The Lost Years

Butch Cassidy: The Lost Years

William W. Johnstone, with J.A. Johnstone. Kensington, $25 (272p) ISBN 978-0-7582-9034-2

Johnstone’s irreverent revisionist western picks up in 1914 with famed outlaw Butch Cassidy, long thought killed in Bolivia, working as a cattle rancher in Texas under the name Jim Strickland. Decades later, Cassidy spins his yarn to a Pinkerton detective who admits to liking “a dramatic moment.” Johnstone is a masterful storyteller, creating a tale that is fanciful and funny, exciting and surprisingly convincing: Butch roams Texas in anonymity until an encounter with a dying rancher gives him a chance to go straight. He keeps a low profile and earns a good reputation until deciding to teach a lesson to a railroad that has covered up a death and cheated the dead man’s widow. After robbing a train, Butch finds that he missed the excitement and action, and thinks his new wild bunch of misfits might rob some more. His involvement with a preacher’s daughter is dangerous enough, but a tenacious Pinkerton detective sets a clever trap that results in a showdown between Cassidy and the law. This is great fun, and Johnstone’s lively, crisp style lets Butch say it best: “The truth was never as good as a legend.” Agent: Robin Rue, Writers House. (May)