Author
Paul L. ThompsonBiography
Even causal readers of Western fiction and
history often ponder the credentials of authors
painting such vivid portraits of a time that we
now can only immortalize in the pages of Western
literature.
Rest
assured that Paul L. Thompson has the necessary
credentials. The Lighthouse Press is honored to
shine its beacon of light for the new millennium
upon an author who is an icon of our Western
American heritage.
Paul
L. Thompson is neither an ivory tower academician
nor a writer trained in pulp fiction's school of
hard knocks. He is exactly what he writes of: the
American cowboy.
Born
and reared on a New Mexico ranching and dairy
farm, the death of his father forced Thompson to
quit school three months shy of finishing the
eighth grade. His mother sold the homestead down
to the wood flooring, and at 13 years of age Paul
Thompson left to find work in Texas. He found
work on a ranch owned by a man in whom history
and myth has so often collided: the very real and
legendary Charles Goodnight. Of his employment
under Goodnight, Thompson has remarked, "
Nowhere in the world did they feed the men
better. At thirteen I received the same wages as
the forty or so year-old man riding right beside
me. It was none of this 'yer just a kid, you get
half wages' as is said today. You did a man's
work and got a man's pay. Then again, I don't
know very many thirteen year-olds that know how
to work, even if they're permitted it."
Following
his ranching employment under Goodnight, Thompson
moved on to another brush with history that
stands uncontested to this day. He rode for the
XIT Ranch, which sprawling out at three million
acres, was at one time the world's largest range
under fence. Texas used the sale of the XIT to
pay for it's red granite capitol, which remains
the largest on the North American Continent while
boasting of a dome standing seven feet higher
than that of the U.S. capitol dome.
Thompson
moved on into working for other West Texas
ranches and by 17 had rode horseback from central
New Mexico to Calgary, Canada. His travels via
horseback have taken him all over New Mexico,
Arizona, Colorado and into areas of Utah and
Wyoming.
With
the last vestiges of the West being replaced by a
world of mechanization, the 22 year-old Thompson
took stock of his life. Now married, the father
of two children and by society's standards,
uneducated, he had few employment prospects of
any value. So once again he grabbed the reins of
responsibility and took a placement test that
enabled him to entered high school. Although it
had been a little late in coming, three months
later he graduated the 12th grade with straight
A's. He went into Pasadena City College for two
years and followed-up that with four years at
UCLA. Thompson graduated with a Mechanical
Engineering Degree.
But
even long-after his graduation, with the West
relegated to little more than celluloid shadows
of reality, Thompson was being beckoned by the
call of the West--in particularly, the call of
the Western lawman. He answered that call by
picking up a deputy Sheriff's badge. His horse
had become the automobile and the frontier was
now the back streets and alleyways of Corrales
New Mexico. But after 2˝ years, and having
almost bled to death from a gunshot wound,
Thompson turned in his badge and hung up his six
iron.
Having
recovered from his brush with death, Thompson
made use of his degree in Mechanical Engineering
by going on to serve as a consultant for numerous
Electric Generating power plants throughout the
United States. He retired early in order to
concentrate on western epics based upon his
exposure to and experiences in the now long-gone
Wild West.
Thompson
reports that every location in his novels is
accurate down to the detail.
"If
my characters lead me off where I haven't been or
don't remember," he says, " I saddle
the horse and go see for myself. In 1992 I rode
horseback in the Mogollon, Gila Wilderness area
of New Mexico and Arizona doing research on eight
novels. This little trip took just over three
months
"
Narrating
in the authentically seasoned dialect of a
southwestern storyteller, Paul L. Thompson is
himself a tribute to the thrilling and
heartbreaking hardships of our nation's western
history. His depiction of the epic old west and
the authoritative knowledge with which he writes
will have you along for a ride in the 1870s. A
ride that you'll swear has you atop a steed and
racing across a sweeping panorama while colt
dragoons are blazing hot in your hands!
Author's
Work
SHORTY
THOMPSON, US MARSHAL
SILVER
OF THE BLACK RANGE
WILLOW
LANE
REVENGE
IN TASCOSA
RIDE
HARD FOR RAYADO
MALPAIS
CHILDREN
OF THE WEST
KILLERS
AND HORSE THIEVES
Author's
Work Offered Online
Shorty Thompson, US
Marshal at AMAZON.COM
and BARNES&NOBLE.COM
Silver Of The Black
Range at AMAZON.COM
and BARNES&NOBLE.COM
Willow Lane at
AMAZON.COM
and BARNES&NOBLE.COM
Revenge In Tascosa
at AMAZON.COM
and BARNES&NOBLE.COM
Ride Hard For Rayado
at AMAZON.COM
and BARNES&NOBLE.COM
Malpais
at AMAZON.COM
and BARNES&NOBLE.COM
Children Of The West at
AMAZON.COM
and BARNES&NOBLE.COM
Killers And Horse
Thieves at BARNES&NOBLE.COM
Author's
Website
OLDWESTNOVELS.COM
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