Charles Neider
Charles Neider was born in Odessa, in what was then Russia, in 1915. His family emigrated to the United States when he was five years old, moving to Richmond, Virginia. In addition to being a novelist, Neider was an essayist, nature writer, and leading Mark Twain scholar. Over the course of his career, he published numerous books of fiction and nonfiction, edited collections of the work of Twain, Tolstoy, Robert Louis Stevenson, and Washington Irving, and made several trips to the Antarctic. He died in 2001.
Charles Neider
Foreword by Will Oldham
“[An] unsentimental, elegiac tale of a legendary gunslinger’s final days . . . Neider’s timeless novel sneaks up on readers with a kind of elliptical genius that simultaneously celebrates and subverts its mythos, anticipating and surpassing many of the revisionist Westerns that were to follow.” —David Wright, Library Journal, Starred Review
The 1950s classic that rewrote the myth of the American West and inspired its subsequent chroniclers from Sam Peckinpah to Marlon Brando to Cormac McCarthy.