At 5' 5" and 125 pounds, Leander McNelly was an improbable figure for a hero. But as captain of the Texas Rangers in the mid-1870s, he was a legendary fighter who led his unit from the front and never asked of them things he wouldn’t do himself. He first became a police officer when Governor Edmund Davis established a Texas State Police force in 1870 and named McNelly as one of four captains. One of McNelly’s first assignments was arresting and bringing back his own boss: he had absconded with $38,000. Lack of funds closed the unit, but it was reestablished in 1875 to address widespread cattle rustling, and McNelly was rehired, leading a unit in south Texas in 1875–76. He died the following year at the age of 33. Clavin (
Tombstone) knows Western history, but the story he tells here is inconclusive—the Texas Rangers would arrest someone; then the suspect would escape or be let loose—and laying out the backstory for every person introduced slows the narrative repeatedly. Still, Clavin tells a good story.
VERDICT Primarily for lovers of Western history.
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