John Slocum Books in Order
About the John Slocum series
Series Premise
John Slocum is a Confederate veteran who lost his Georgia family plantation to carpetbaggers after the Civil War. Disillusioned, he abandons the South forever and becomes a wandering gunman across the American West. He is a skilled shootist, expert horseman, and survivor who takes whatever work comes his way—hired gun, bounty hunter, ranch hand, gambler, or protector of the innocent—while avoiding deep attachments and always ready to move on.
Each novel is a self-contained adventure: Slocum rides into a new town or territory, encounters trouble (rustlers, outlaws, corrupt sheriffs, land barons, or personal enemies), and resolves it through gunfights, cleverness, and sheer grit. Plots often involve:
- Protecting a widow, ranch, or town from threats.
- Hunting bounties or outlaws.
- Escaping posses or revenge-seeking enemies.
- Romancing women (frequently featuring steamy encounters).
- Navigating gold rushes, cattle drives, range wars, or frontier justice.
The recurring motif is Slocum's lone-wolf independence—he trusts few people, lives by his gun, and moves on once the job is done. While not always a hero, he is "mostly decent," helping the vulnerable when it suits him and refusing to be bullied. The series celebrates the classic Western archetype of the solitary gunslinger in a harsh, unforgiving frontier.
Main Characters
John Slocum: The protagonist—a tall, lean, dark-haired Confederate veteran in his 30s–40s. A deadly gunman, skilled tracker, and expert rider, he is cynical, independent, and self-reliant. He avoids deep ties, lives by his gun, and follows his own moral code. While capable of violence, he helps the innocent and despises bullies. Women are drawn to him, and he enjoys their company, but he never settles down.
Setting
The series is set in the post-Civil War American West (roughly 1870s–1890s), spanning a vast frontier landscape. Stories take place across Texas, Arizona, New Mexico, Kansas, Colorado, California, Dakota Territory, and other Western territories. Locations include dusty cattle towns, mining camps, frontier forts, saloons, ranches, stagecoach trails, and remote canyons.
The setting is vivid and archetypal: wide-open plains, rugged mountains, desert badlands, bustling boomtowns, and isolated homesteads. Travel is by horse, stagecoach, or train, with dangers from outlaws, Indians, weather, and terrain. The era is lawless and raw—sheriffs are often corrupt, justice is personal, and survival depends on skill and nerve. The constant movement across the West gives the series a restless, nomadic feel.
Tone & Themes
The tone is gritty, hard-boiled, and action-oriented—classic pulp Western with an adult edge. The books are fast-paced, straightforward, and unapologetically violent, with frequent gunfights, fistfights, and sexual encounters described in explicit (for the era) detail. Violence is graphic but not gratuitous; it's part of the frontier reality.
The narrative is cynical about authority, corruption, and human nature, yet Slocum maintains a personal code of honor. Humor is dry and sparse, often in dialogue or ironic situations. Romance is lusty and transient—Slocum enjoys women but rarely stays. The overall feel is rugged and masculine: entertaining, escapist, and nostalgic for the classic Western myth of the lone rider facing danger with a six-gun and grit.
The John Slocum series by Jake Logan is a monumental achievement in Western fiction, delivering over 430 novels of hard-hitting, action-packed frontier adventures under a single house name. Featuring the iconic, lone-wolf gunfighter John Slocum—a tough, honorable drifter who survives the post-Civil War West through skill, nerve, and a personal code—the books offer classic pulp entertainment: gunfights, saloons, outlaws, romance, and moral dilemmas in a lawless land. With its gritty realism, fast pacing, and unapologetic adult tone, the series captures the mythic appeal of the Old West while providing endless escapism. Though formulaic, its longevity and massive output make it a cornerstone of the genre, appealing to fans of traditional Westerns who crave a wandering hero facing danger with a six-gun and grit. If you're seeking the longest-running, most enduring Western series ever written, John Slocum's trail remains one of the most traveled in pulp history.
FAQ
430 books total: 200 main + 230 companion books
No new book is currently scheduled. The latest book, Slocum's Silver Burden, was published in November 2014.
Slocum's Silver Burden was published in November 2014.
The first book in the series is North to Dakota, published in January 1970.
The series primarily falls into the Historical genre.
John Slocum is a Confederate veteran who lost his Georgia family plantation to carpetbaggers after the Civil War. Disillusioned, he abandons the South forever and becomes a wandering gunman across the American West. He is a skilled shootist, expert horseman, and survivor who takes whatever work comes his way—hired gun, bounty hunter, ranch hand, gambler, or protector of the innocent—while avoiding deep attachments and always ready to move on. Each novel is a self-contained adventure: Slocum rides into a new town or territory, encounters trouble (rustlers, outlaws, corrupt sheriffs, land barons, or personal enemies), and resolves it through gunfights, cleverness, and sheer grit. Plots often involve: - Protecting a widow, ranch, or town from threats. - Hunting bounties or outlaws. - Escaping posses or revenge-seeking enemies. - Romancing women (frequently featuring steamy encounters). - Navigating gold rushes, cattle drives, range wars, or frontier justice. The recurring motif is Slocum's lone-wolf independence—he trusts few people, lives by his gun, and moves on once the job is done. While not always a hero, he is "mostly decent," helping the vulnerable when it suits him and refusing to be bullied. The series celebrates the classic Western archetype of the solitary gunslinger in a harsh, unforgiving frontier.
The series does not currently have a new book scheduled.