American author Max Brand's Gunman's Reckoning is a famous work of western action literature. In the story Gunman's Reckoning, a tough person meets an evil man who has an angel daughter, and the tough guy ends up falling for the bad man. It tells the tale of a vagrant who is assigned the task of making things right and retrieving the gold mine claims she and her father formerly owned. While performing this, he becomes aware that what he was asked to accomplish was not entirely accurate. However, the drifter disregards this since he has found the solution to a long-running desire by accepting this job. It should not be assumed that he approached this situation with a broken heart and a sneery, uncomfortable emotion similar to how a man may be supposed to feel as he prepared to murder a sleeping enemy. Because Lefty did not feel anything like it. Instead, he was overcome by extreme joy. The thought that he was about to get rid of this nuisance could have made him sing with glee. The novel Gunman's Reckoning is a superb illustration of Max Brand's writing. The combination of love, lies, adventure, and humor creates a story that is immensely readable.
Frederick Faust (May 29, 1892 - May 12, 1944) was an American writer known basically for his Western stories using the pen name of Max Brand. Faust made the well-known fictitious character of He wrote the character of young Dr. James Kildare for a series of fiction stories. Faust's other pen names were George Owen Baxter, Evan Evans, George Evans, Peter Dawson, David Monitoring, John Frederick, Peter Morland, George Challis, Peter Ward, Frederick Faust, and Frederick Frost. During mid-1944, when Faust, Frank Gruber, and fellow writer Steve Fisher were working at Warner Brothers, they frequently had discussions during evenings, alongside a Colonel Nee, who was a specialized advisor sent from Washington, D.C. One day, accused of whiskey, Faust discussed getting assigned to a company of foot troopers so he could encounter the war and later compose a war novel. Colonel Nee said he could fix it for himself and half a month after the fact he did, getting Faust a task for Harper's Magazine as a war reporter in Italy. While going with American warriors battling in Italy in 1944, Faust was injured mortally by shrapnel.