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Thomas Eidson

Author of St. Agnes' Stand

9+ Works 660 Members 27 Reviews

About the Author

Includes the names: Tom Eidson, Thomas Eidson

Works by Thomas Eidson

St. Agnes' Stand (1994) 212 copies, 13 reviews
The Last Ride (1995) 182 copies, 8 reviews
The Missing [2003 film] (2003) — Writer — 143 copies, 1 review
All God's Children (1996) 66 copies, 1 review
Souls of Angels: A Novel (2006) 32 copies, 3 reviews
Hannah's Gift (1998) 21 copies, 1 review
All God's Children Poster (1996) 2 copies
Desaparecidas (2004) 1 copy

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Birthdate
1944
Gender
male
Nationality
USA
Places of residence
Marblehead, Massachusetts, USA

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Reviews

 
Flagged
DemFen | 12 other reviews | Oct 31, 2024 |

This was a superb western novel that was much more than a western. Along with the horses and guns, there are layers of philosophical underpinnings and emotions brought to life through fantastic character development. We get several points of view of life in the American west of the 1880s, which broadens the book’s appeal.
I can understand how some wouldn’t take to the slow pace of the first half of the book, but I relished in the great writing and the atmosphere that Eidson created. This is not just a great western, but a great book. I tip my hat to Mr. Eidson for creating such a beautiful story.
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MickeyMole | 7 other reviews | Oct 2, 2023 |
Kazuo Ishiguro was interviewed in the New York Times recently since the Buried Giant just came out and he said, surprise, that he likes Westerns. He mentioned a few of the greatest and this one that I hadn't read. It's pretty good. Westerns can be very direct, almost like poetry, and if there is anything that you find slightly out of place or unbelievable, there is no place for it to hide.
 
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markm2315 | 12 other reviews | Jul 1, 2023 |
On the face of it, Thomas Eidson's The Last Ride is a straightforward Western story, right down to its generic title. It follows Maggie, a young frontierswoman with grit, who reconnects with her estranged father in order to rescue her daughter, who has been kidnapped by a band of ruthless Apaches. To get her back, they must travel in hot pursuit across the Western landscape, overcoming the terrain, their savage enemies and, of course, their differences.

All rather unremarkable, you would agree – though for fans of the genre it's not an unappealing prospect either. But there are two things which help The Last Ride stand somewhat apart from its formula. The first is that Eidson laces it throughout with a tension between the Christianity believed in by Maggie and the mystic paganism of Samuel Jones, her estranged father who left when she was young to live amongst the Indians. This tension is quite well done throughout, and while some readers will be put off by the lack of ambiguity in the mysticism – Eidson is quite happy for characters to have prophetic dreams which resolve an impasse in their adventure, for example – it works because Eidson engages with it. The juxtaposition of the Christianity and the Indian mysticism is reasonably nourishing brain food and gives a hint of literary weight to this otherwise standard Western. Deus may be ex in Eidson's machina, but He rooms there comfortably.

The second reason The Last Ride stands apart from many of its peers is that Eidson can actually write. Though routine in its course, the book isn't actually formulaic. The difference between those two adjectives might not immediately be apparent, but essentially boils down to how well a writer can freshen things up. Eidson's 'frontierswoman with grit' character has less sass and more vulnerability than writers usually grant such characters, whilst the half-wild, estranged father character has more to him than a grunt or a grizzled line of dialogue, and his regrets at what he has abandoned are raw. Eidson's dialogue is just a little bit keener and more real; his plot pivots a bit more artfully disguised. Consequently, a routine story feels rather refreshed when you're reading it, and while it doesn't make The Last Ride an essential read, the book is a good bridge between the pot-boiler Westerns and the weightier, literary ones.
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MikeFutcher | 7 other reviews | Jun 30, 2023 |

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Statistics

Works
9
Also by
10
Members
660
Popularity
#38,228
Rating
½ 3.7
Reviews
27
ISBNs
61
Languages
4

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