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Oliver Strange – Sudden Makes War (1942)

Please do not read this book if you are likely to become offended with, what was the norm 80 years ago.

The fifth Sudden book chronologically in the series.

Sudden becomes involved in a hunt for treasure amongst changing relationships between two ranches at war with each other.  With diabolical and treacherous villainy, the story comes to a happy ending – with the normal Sudden result of truth and goodness winning over evil.

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Preface

Please do not read this book if you are likely to become offended.

The fifth Sudden book chronologically in the series.

Sudden becomes involved in a hunt for treasure amongst changing relationships between two ranches at war with each other.  With diabolical and treacherous villainy, the story comes to a happy ending – with a normal Sudden result of truth winning over evil.

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Along the far reaches of the Chisholm Trail, from deadly Kansas, along hidden outlaw trails, the tall, mysterious man named James Green stopped to ask the same questions, then moved on. A legacy of hatred left to him by a dying man had sent him in search of two men … and a final, deadly reckoning.

As he rode, he earned a nickname that was whispered whenever men talked about gunfighters, and whenever violence ran rampant in dusty streets.  They called him Sudden, and his bitter quest was relentless.

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The Sudden series is an excellent series and well worth reading, again and again over the years, as I have.  Although Oliver Strange is an good writer, the Sudden Series is often politically incorrect for our current era, including the fact that Sudden rides a black horse he calls N****r.  This is clearly not meant to be any kind of specific slight directed towards black people however, it is definitely disconcerting when it pops up.  This book (and the series) promotes the strong and honourable characteristics often associated with the west.  There is a lot in the characters to admire, including persons of colour, Mexican’s and native Indians.

Apart from the ten books in this series written by Oliver Strange, Frederick H. Christian also wrote five books after Oliver Strange died.  Although worth reading, please be aware that a number of the Frederick H. Christian books appear to be almost copies of some of Oliver Strange Sudden books.  This is a shame as Frederick H. Christian is the non-de-plume of Fred Nolan who authored some excellent books.

Series Preface

James Green, aka Sudden, the hero of the series, is a fictional character created by an English author Oliver Strange in the early 1930’s, set in the American Wild West era.  Oliver Strange died in 1952, and the series was revived by Frederick H. Christian in the 1960s which I do not think are a patch on Oliver Strange’s Sudden books.

Jim Green is a boy raised by an Indian horse trader, bought by an old man called Bill Evesham.  Bill Evesham treats his as his son and sends the boy back East for educating.  Whilst the boy is away, his foster father is swindled by two men.  Upon the boys’ return, Bill Evesham dies and on the death bed, his foster father says, “Peterson stole my little girl and Webb cheated me of my money and farm,” So the boy promises the old man that they will both get their just deserts.

Sudden, the deadliest gunfighter of them all, smashes through 15 glorious adventures, taming wild towns, punishing crooked town Marshals, fighting range wars and managing near impossible cattle drives.  All the Sudden books are standalone stories, superbly written and thoroughly enjoyable.

The books do contain politically incorrect references to non-white Americans but I believe it is more because of the setting of the time period being written about than any racial prejudice. Sudden, of course, judges each man according to his deeds and does not show any prejudice. Regardless, the books are a treat not to be missed by any worthwhile aficionado of western and/or adventure novels.  The series is centred around a gunfighter in the American Wild West, who is in search for the two men who cheated his foster father.  Jim, the young man, promises his dying foster father that he will find the two and take revenge.  He gives the name James Green to himself.  In the first book in the series (Sudden – Outlawed) Jim is accused of a robbery which he did not commit and subsequently, becomes an ‘wanted’.

The series details the adventures of a gunfighter who earns the nickname ‘Sudden’ because of his lightning speed with a gun.  Sudden is also characterised as an intelligent man who is respectful of the law, unwilling to use a gun unless absolutely necessary, humanitarian, brave, and strong.

Oliver Strange created his own American language substituting words such as “yu” for “you”; “yore” for “your” and “pore” for “poor” as examples.  We have kept to them as faithfully as we can, along with using English spellings over American.

In his blog, Gary Dobbs says: “… the Sudden books may prove problematic for modern readers, but the language used is a product of the times and if there is any message to Sudden, it is one of anti-racism.  The character is respectful to Indians; indeed he was brought up by Indians.  In fact, the books portray racism on the part of any character as bad and undesirable.  Ignore the politically correct crowd, because the Sudden books, both the original series by Oliver Strange and Fred Nolan’s latter-day adventures, written as by Frederick H. Christian are excellent westerns and adventure stories.”

Sudden’s horse is named ‘Nigger’ as it is black.  In the era this series was written, Nigger was an acceptable term.   In the Sudden books, this word was definitely not used in a derogatory fashion.  However, it does show us, how, rightfully, times have changed as such derogatory and racist terms are rightfully now not allowed.

Range Robbers was the first book published however, when Oliver Strange continued the series, he went back and forth with Sudden’s history and therefore the publication order is not the same as the chronological order.

The chronological order of the Oliver Strange books, as far as we can work out, is below:

  1. Sudden—Outlawed
  2. Sudden
  3. Sudden—Gold Seeker
  4. Sudden Rides Again
  5. Sudden Makes War
  6. Sudden Takes the Trail
  7. Sudden Plays a Hand
  8. The Marshal of Lawless
  9. The Range Robbers
  10. The Law o’ the Lariat

About the Author

Oliver Strange was born 1871 in Worcester and his childhood was spent in Kidderminster, Worcestershire, England.  His father came from Oxfordshire.

In 1907, Oliver married Amy Nora Rumbol in Richmond, Surrey, where Amy Nora was a schoolteacher.  Amy was born towards the end of 1881 in Leeming, Yorkshire but the family originated in Hampshire”.  Amy’s father was also a schoolteacher and an older sister, Ada, was a music teacher the 1890’s.  They were teaching at a school in Barnet, Herts.

Oliver Strange produced one of the best Western series ever written, when he created the character ‘Sudden’.

James Green, alias Sudden, archetypal hero of the Western sagas, kidnapped as a child, raised by Indians, wrongfully accused of murder, moves through the west searching for two men and a final reckoning.  Wearing two guns tied low, riding a horse as black as night, he earns a nickname which is whispered whenever talk turns to gunfighting.  A name which makes even strong men flinch when his eyes met theirs … a lonely man with a dangerous mission.

 

Oliver Strange published ten Sudden books

The chronological order of the Oliver Strange books, as far as we can work out, is below:

  1. Sudden—Outlawed
  2. Sudden
  3. Sudden—Gold Seeker
  4. Sudden Rides Again
  5. Sudden Makes War
  6. Sudden Takes the Trail
  7. Sudden Plays a Hand
  8. The Marshal of Lawless
  9. The Range Robbers
  10. The Law o’ the Lariat

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