With the exception of two or three stories which I didn't love as much as the rest, this is a great collection with a common theme: wild west.
Some have magic, others steam engines, and some have both; some have only one character in it with the exception of the thing they are fighting, others have battles; some are about the living, others are about the dead; some have only humans, others other creatures too; some are sad, some humorous. And this is only small part of it. I can keep going. This anthology shows just how grateful this theme is. You can do anything with it.
The Red-Headed Dead: A Reverend Jebediah Mercer Tale by Joe R. Lansdale
East Texas, 1880
A reluctant Hand of God, Reverend Jebediah Mercer from the dead of the west, is drawn to yet another fight against the evil. It is way too short, but I loved it. Where else could you read about fist fight with a vampiric monster?
The Old Slow Man And His Gold Gun From Space by Ben H. Winters
Sacramento, California, 1851
Crane and Caleb, two gold prospectors, get an opportunity of their lifetime when a strange old man offers him a very special deal. A story with a twist in the end.
Hellfire On The High Frontier by David Farland
Wyoming Territory, Circa 1876
Morgan Gray, a Texas ranger, is on a trail of a skin-walker when a Stranger who helped him out before calls in a favour. Morgan can't refuse. He has to go to the High Frontier, a city in the clouds discovered four years earlier. You won't know where this story would take you judging by its beginning.
The Hell-Bound Stagecoach by Mike Resnick
Arizona Territory, Circa 1885
Four people are travelling together and only when they start talking do they realize that their coach isn't an ordinary one. Great ending. The coachman shouldn't have put those four together.
Stingers And Strangers by Seanan McGuire
Passing through Nevada, Westbound on the Southern Pacific Railway, 1931
Thanks to this story I got this anthology. Fran and Jonathan are on their way 'to determine the reason that the local Apraxis swarms have been moving during their settled season'. The Apraxis isn't the only thing they find. There is an annoying scene with a very beautiful woman they meet, but the ending saved it.
Bookkeeper, Narrator, Gunslinger Charles Yu
Lost Springs, Wyoming, 1890
A young man accidentally finds himself in a role he never expected. He also never expected an extraordinary gift.
Holy Jingle by Alan Dean Foster
Carson City, Nevada Territory, 1863
Something strange happened to Monk's young friend. He can't get him out of the brothel. So Monk finds a special man for the job. Great story and great ending.
The Man With No Heart by Beth Revis
Arizona Territory, 1882
Ray Malcolm needs answers about his origin, the truth about why his bones are made of metal and why he doesn't seem to have a heart. Following the trail of mechanical spiders, he finds everything he needs.
Wrecking Party Alastair Reynolds
Arizona Territory, 1896
A dirty wanderer is caught 'wrecking the horseless carriage on Main Street a little after two in the morning.' The sheriff recognizes him as his old friend and partner and allows him to tell his story. Why is he attacking machines?
Hell From The East by Hugh Howey
The Free Territory of Colorado, 1868
To be honest, this one was a bit boring. An officer goes mad and kills a bunch of his soldiers. The narrator tells us of his attempt to understand what happened.
Second Hand by Rajan Khanna
Wyoming Territory, Circa 1874
A story with a great idea: cards that can be used magically either as weapons or something else. The two characters from the story are in the town to talk to one of the Card Sharp old-timers, but everything goes wrong.
Alvin And The Apple Tree by Orson Scott Card
The State of Hio, 1820
Alvin comes to a village where every person blames themselves for one sin or another. Being a Maker, he fixes it in the end. I'll just leave two quotes from this story and most would understand why: 'Certainty is how you feel about your opinions. Knowledge implies that you’re pretty sure, but that you’re also right. Certainty doesn’t require that you be right.' And this one: 'Making other people ashamed of themselves so you can feel proud of being better. Those are sinful kinds of pride.'
Madam Damnable’s Sewing Circle by Elizabeth Bear
Seattle, Washington, 1899
A setup that is too long for something that isn't really a story, but rather an episode in a brothel. While the world seems more than interesting (a villain has some kind of device strapped on his arm and it makes people do what he wants), it is just an episode.Next, an Indian female character doesn't have to be Priya. I want to know why Madam Damnable is so formidable.
Still, it is funny how the narrator presents her 'sewing' business.
Strong Medicine by Tad Williams
Medicine Dance, Arizona Territory, 1899
Medicine Dance is a very special place. Every thirty nine years something happens to the town and it needs any help it can get. And every thirty nine years, on Midsummer's Day a stranger comes to their aid.
Red Dreams by Jonathan Maberry
Wyoming Territory, 1875
When a story features a man who participated in the Sand Creek massacre, it is impossible to empathize. it starts with him being the only survivor in a battle. He starts hearing strange sounds and even strangers things start happening around him. Then Walking Bear came.
Bamboozled by Kelley Armstrong
Dakota Territory, 1877
Nate and Lily and their group of thieves are on another job where she has to pretend to be something she is not. Nothing is as it seems. Great twist in the end. Loved it.
Sundown by Tobias S. Buckell
State of Colorado, 1877
Willie Kennard, a Marshall, comes to Duffy in pursuit of a man who killed a group of miners whom he was guarding. Another great story with a twist and a satisfying ending.
La Madre Del Oro by Jeffrey Ford
New Mexico Territory, 1856
A young man gets deputized by a sheriff's deputy for a posse to catch a murderer of a young girl. The man isn't just a killer - they say he also ate her. So the deputy, one former gunslinger, our young narrator, and their guide are after Bastard George. Only, George isn't the greatest danger out there.
What I Assume You Shall Assume by Ken Liu
Idaho Territory, Circa 1890
A story of a power of words. Chinese are being hunted all around the area out main character is passing through. A Chinese woman stumbles into his camp.
I didn't really like all the switching between the present and the past, but it helped me accept the ending. After thinking about how this story ends, I realized it ended as it was supposed to.
The Devil’s Jack by Laura Anne Gilman
The Territory, Three Days’ Ride Northeast of the Canyon, July 1801
Jack played against the devil and lost. The story finds him sixteen years into that job trying to outrun his master's call. He will play again, but not for himself.
The Golden Age by Walter Jon Williams
Alta California, Spring 1852
A humorous and at the same time a bit sad story of superheroes and super-villains of the Wild West.
Neversleeps by Fred Van Lente
Monument Valley, Near Navajo Territory, Northbound on the Northwest Pacific Express, 120 years after the Awakening
I don' think I'll ever read 'Leviathan' (one: it is YA so I won't lose much; two: I don't like how Nikola Tesla is depicted there . yes, I've read the reviews). But now I know that I won't mind a female character Tesla. Not the Tesla, but a descendant.
The world in this story is a world where science and electricity are banned, everyone turned to magic, dragons are used to pull trains, etc. The title refers to government Pinkerton agents who hunt down anyone who uses the forbidden items or electricity or anything else the government judges inconvenient. 'Nicola Tesla had been the West’s most wanted Science Criminal, with a million-dollar bounty on her head.'
Dead Man’s Hand by Christie Yant
Deadwood, Dakota Territory, 1876
Various and often contrary accounts on what happened to Wild Bill Hickok.
Overall, this has been a great collection of stories with only a couple of those that weren't as strong as others.