Since 1953 the WWA Spur Awards have honored the best in Western fiction,
nonfiction, song lyrics, poetry and film scripting.
"In
western writing, a Spur Award is the top award in the nation. Only 102
authors have won Spur Awards for adult-level novels in the 62-year history of
Western Writers of America. Previous winners include Larry McMurtry,
Louis L'Amour, Elmer Kelton, and Tony Hillerman. I'm both stunned and
honored to find my name on the same list." - Patrick Dearen
Congratulations to Patrick Dearen for this incredible accomplishment!
For two men—one white, one black—the
great cattle drift and roundup of 1884-1885 will be a search for redemption.
Will Brite, a cowboy working the Middle Concho region of Texas, becomes tangled in barbed wire and trapped under his horse during a deadly blizzard. He discovers an unwelcome savior when Zeke Boles, a former slave with a bloody past, emerges from the blinding snow. This fugitive stirs fearful memories in Will, who never suspects that his life will be inexorably linked with Zeke’s during the most brutal roundup of their lives.
Praise for The Big
Drift
“A powerful depiction of the life of drovers, their beliefs and values, and what riding for the brand meant to them. Dearen explores the innermost fears and passions of West Texas men and women whose lot in life was brutal and bleak, people who struggled to find the courage to go on, day by day. The Big Drift is the very essence of what great fiction should be.” -Richard S. Wheeler, six-time Spur Award winner
“A powerful depiction of the life of drovers, their beliefs and values, and what riding for the brand meant to them. Dearen explores the innermost fears and passions of West Texas men and women whose lot in life was brutal and bleak, people who struggled to find the courage to go on, day by day. The Big Drift is the very essence of what great fiction should be.” -Richard S. Wheeler, six-time Spur Award winner
“Patrick Dearen sets his story during the
big drift, when days were counted in inches and feet of snow and entire herds
were lost, driven to a halt against drift fences and frozen on their
feet. In creating the pivotal character of Zeke, a former slave, Dearen
has consulted actual records of post-Civil War black cowboys, words spoken
through time by the black men themselves who were there, who remember, who made
the passage--freed men still striving to be free men in a white-controlled
society. Dearen simply reveals Will’s heart, his conscience, his will to
live, and the struggle he has with all of these and with the blizzard that
threatens everything. The Big Drift shows us how Texas climate is
a plot in itself, an enemy, a stage lit with various fulminations and excesses,
like war itself, against which human life remains vulnerable and highlighted
with gore and glory.” -Mary Hood, award-winning author
Enjoy an Excerpt from The Big Drift
Master Young! Master Young!
Master Young! Master Young!
Even across time and distance and over the howl of a bitterly cold norther,
Zeke Boles could still hear his own cry as Samuel Young had slumped, bloodying
the boardwalk outside the “whites only” tavern. He could still taste the
hanging gun smoke and feel the trigger firm against his finger, still see the
powder residue that had sprinkled his ebony knuckles. A drunken man’s hand also
had gripped that Schofield revolver, but only Zeke’s had squeezed off the shot
that had killed the person who had been the one constant in his twenty-nine
years.
And through all the troubling months that had followed Zeke down into West
Texas, his only choice had been to run.
The rattle of his spurs in a chilling gust stirred him to the here and now. It
was late on a somber day in December 1884, and he hunched half-frozen in the
saddle, the nose of his cow pony nodding along through a flurry of snow
pellets. Barbed wire flanked his course on the left, and over the bay’s ears he
could see the posts marching west through broken county marked by prickly pear
and the skeletons of dormant scrub mesquites.
It was a drift fence, and bunched against it in places were mossy-horned cattle
burned with a Slash Five brand. Denied instinctive retreat from the wintry
blast, the beeves could only turn wild eyes and flaring nostrils to the
ice-glazed wire and bawl.
The storm’s initial dust swirls had caught Zeke by surprise just after he had
forded the Middle Concho. When he had swung around in the saddle, the north
sky’s deep, ominous blue, like bruising on a dead man’s face, had told him to
brace for the worst. The wind had pushed at his back throughout the two-mile
ascent out of the valley, and then the fence had loomed up and turned him west.
Through a freezing mist that had become ice pellets he had pushed on, searching
for sagging wires that he could responsibly stamp down with his boot and step
his horse across. Still, Zeke figured that no matter how far he rode from that
cattle trail tavern on the Texas side of the distant Big Red, the guilt would
go with him. His remorse manifested itself greatest in the money belt, heavy
with gold pieces under his moth-eaten coat and linsey-woolsey shirt with
missing buttons. With his every heartbeat the belt seemed to throb, most
notably where the Schofield revolver in the waistband of his duck pants pushed
against it.
It was cursed, this gold of Master Young’s, as cursed as the drunken cowhand’s
revolver that had sent Young to his grave. Only after a half-week of
day-and-night flight had Zeke even remembered the money, but through all the
ensuing miles he had held on to it, not a cent spent, in the vague hope he
might somehow return it to the kindly woman who had been the wife of his
employer and onetime master.
Meet
Author, Patrick Dearen
The author of twenty-one books, Patrick
Dearen was born in 1951 and grew up in the small West Texas town of Sterling
City. He earned a bachelor of journalism from The University of Texas at Austin
in 1974 and received nine national and state awards as a reporter for two West
Texas daily newspapers.
An authority on the Pecos and Devils
rivers of Texas, Dearen also has gained recognition for his knowledge of
old-time cowboy life. In the late 1980s and early 1990s, he preserved the
firsthand accounts of 76 men who cowboyed before 1932. These interviews, along
with decades of archival study, have enriched Dearen’s twelve novels and led to
nine nonfiction books.
His newest novel, The Big Drift,
is based on the historic big drift of 1884, when a blizzard drove thousands of
free-ranging cattle down from the Great Plains into West Texas. His other
novels include To Hell or the Pecos, inspired by actual nineteenth
century events on the Butterfield and Goodnight-Loving trails. For the
background of another novel, Perseverance, Dearen turned to Depression-era
Texas and hobo life.
Dearen has been honored
by Western Writers of America, San Antonio Conservation Society, Will Rogers
Medallion Awards, West Texas Historical Association, and Permian Historical
Society. A backpacking enthusiast and ragtime pianist, he makes his home in
Midland, Texas with his wife Mary (managing editor of the Midland
Reporter-Telegram) and their son Wesley.
The Big Drift, released August 26, 2014 by TCU Press
Print edition: http://www.tamupress.com/product/Big-Drift,7896.aspx
Kindle: http://www.amazon.com/Big-Drift-Patrick-Dearen-ebook/dp/B00MHAGMXA/ref=sr_1_1_title_0_main?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1408668314&sr=1-1&keywords=the+big+drift%3A
Nook: http://www.barnesandnoble.com/w/the-big-drift-patrick-dearen/1119619350?ean=9780875655703
Kindle: http://www.amazon.com/Big-Drift-Patrick-Dearen-ebook/dp/B00MHAGMXA/ref=sr_1_1_title_0_main?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1408668314&sr=1-1&keywords=the+big+drift%3A
Nook: http://www.barnesandnoble.com/w/the-big-drift-patrick-dearen/1119619350?ean=9780875655703