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The Ballad of Midnight and McRae Virtual Book Tour

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Literary Historical Fiction / LGBT Friendly

Date Published: 07-16-2025

 

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For Caleb McRae–devout Baptist, Texas Ranger, hero of the Wild
West–life’s simple enough: lawmen bring bad guys to justice, and hellfire’s a
sinner’s fate. At least it seems that way, until he falls in love with the
notorious outlaw, Henry Midnight…

Thomas Anderson of Literary Titan calls The Ballad of Midnight and McRae
“wildly entertaining” and recommends it “to lovers of literary fiction, fans
of Cormac McCarthy or Marilynne Robinson, and anyone who believes that stories
still have the power to save.”

Poet Malcolm Guite writes, “In the story of Midnight and McRae we are enabled
to hear the long conversation between Pagan and Christian, and within
Christianity between protestant and catholic. and on a personal level between
father and son, between lover and beloved, and deep within ourselves, the
conversation between the person we are pretending to be and the person we
really are. And all these vital conversations are enfolded in and arise from a
compelling story set on the frontiers, the badlands, and the formative days of
America itself, the place where so many of these conversations need to take
place.”

 

“Wildly entertaining… Jess Lederman writes with a fierce
tenderness, blending lyrical prose with grit and grace.”

 

—Thomas Anderson, Editor-in-Chief of Literary Titan

 

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EXCERPT

Chapter One

Into the Desert

M

y father was one of the last great lawmen of the Wild West.

His name was Caleb McRae. He was born in 1876, a fair-haired child with eyes the clear cold blue of a mountain lake. The son of a Broad Street banker, he grew up in Greenwich, Connecticut on a sprawling estate, yet cared nothing for money or the shiny things it can buy.

Justice was his only passion.

He thrilled to read of Revelation’s hundred-pound hailstones raining down on sinners and devoured dime novels that told tales of the Texas Rangers. In his imagination it was he who collared John Wesley Hardin, the murderous outlaw, and Sam Bass, robber of coaches and trains.

As a young boy he learned to ride. He bought a six shooter when he turned thirteen and taught himself to blast tin cans off fence posts at fifty paces. He chopped cords of wood to build the muscles in his arms, and by fifteen was broad-shouldered and an inch over six feet tall. At seventeen he left his family’s Presbyterian church and became a Baptist, blithely ignoring his father’s stern warnings not to evangelize on the streets of downtown Greenwich.

One secret tormented him: he had no desire for girls and found his gaze lin- gering on other boys. Might he, of all people, be a pansy, a fairy, an affront to the Living God? No, impossible, the Lord must be testing his righteousness. All right, then; Caleb would not let Him down. And so, in a solitary ceremony late one midsummer’s eve, he knelt before a cross he’d fashioned from old railroad ties and vowed to renounce his sinful thoughts and wayward dreams.

4 THE BALLAD OF MIDNIGHT AND MCRAE

In his eighteenth year he set out for the Lone Star State, delighted that his parents had cut him off without a dime. How much easier it would be to enter the Kingdom of Heaven!

He made his way to Austin, convinced the Rangers to let him sign on, and two years later was sent to the brawling boomtown of El Paso. The railroad had brought prosperity, and with it came gunfighters, gamblers, con artists, and thieves. Few lawmen lasted long.

For my father, it was perfect.

I keep a newspaper clipping on my writing desk, a black-and-white photograph that appeared in the El Paso Herald in December of 1898. Though its ostensible subject is a certain Mayor Magoffin, my father’s hulking image dominates the frame. He’s the only clean-shaven man in the picture, and his hair, while not long, is a leonine mass of what must have been golden curls. There’s a broad-brimmed Stetson in his left hand and a Winchester rifle in his right. He’s wearing an oilskin duster and has an air of regal authority that belies his twenty-two years.

Caleb McRae was fierce and fair and never backed down, and in a few short years led the taming of El Paso. By the turn of the century, his life had become routine. He put away garden-variety bad guys, became the youngest Elder of the First Baptist Church, and prayed for the chance to do something great for the glory of God.

In the spring of 1900, rumors spread of an outlaw who’d been plundering the Arizona and New Mexico Territories, rustling horses and cattle on both sides of the Rio Grande. His name was Henry Midnight, and his legend grew with each passing month. He was lean and lithe and wore his raven hair long like the Indians. He dressed in black and rode a pitch-dark Arabian stallion, the two mere phantoms of the night, invisible to lawmen’s eyes. Rumor had it he’d killed a man in Arizona and escaped from jail only hours before he was to be hanged; he’d become a jewel thief, snatching an emerald necklace from the night table of the mayor’s wife while she and her husband blissfully snored. The Tejanos, who’d gotten the short end since the Anglos came to El Paso, sung his praises. And if the

INTO THE DESERT 5

Jesuits were especially generous in their provisions for the poor, it was thanks to the Midnight bandito donating the proceeds from his latest haul.

These stories, however fantastic, intrigued my father, the last most of all. What if the man were not entirely in thrall to Satan, what if there were hope for his soul? Caleb McRae of the Texas Rangers made two vows: he’d deliver Henry Midnight to justice and bring him to the Lord.

My father pinned a map of the El Paso Valley on his kitchen wall, marked the date and location of each of Midnight’s crimes, and by the summer of ’01 a pattern began to emerge. He devised a theory to predict where the rustler would strike next and for weeks led stakeouts, all to no avail. And then, on a moonless August night, as he peered out from a hill overlooking the back section of the Double-Bar Ranch, three figures on horseback appeared.

The capture would have been fast and smooth if his men had followed the plan he’d so carefully devised, but one of his deputies broke from cover too soon and their advantage was lost.

Midnight and his men fled, each in a different direction. My father had no doubt which was Henry, for the rumor that he rode a black Arabian proved to be true. The outlaw had a good half mile on him and was heading southeast, into the Chihuahuan desert. What had happened to the others my father had no idea; the chase had come down to just the two of them.

Hours went by, and a hint of dawn appeared on the eastern horizon. Where was Midnight leading him, and how long would this go on?

No matter.

He had his Winchester and his Colt 45, some hard biscuits and dried beef and a gallon canteen. Boaz, his Appaloosa, could keep up with anything on four legs. If he had to chase Midnight to the gates of hell, Caleb McRae would get his man.

He spurred his beast on.

 

About the Author

Jess Lederman
Jess Lederman lives with his wife and young son in Southern California,
where he writes historical fiction. His debut novel, Hearts Set Free, was an
award-winning Amazon best-seller. When he’s not writing or playing with his
son, he’s usually at the piano playing Chopin and Brahms for his wife.

 

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Hearts Set Free Virtual Book Tour

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Inspirational Literary/Historical Fiction

Date Published: March, 2019

Publisher: Azure Star, LLC

 

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Seven Lives Inexorably Intertwined. Over Eighty-Six Years. That Will Bring
a Revelation Beyond What Any of Them Could Imagine.

 

An award-winning work of Christian-themed literary fiction

 

The Alaska Territory, 1925. When Yura Noongwook’s husband abandons
her and her thirteen-year-old son, she vows to win him back and destroy the
woman who stole his heart. They embark on an epic cross-country quest that
leads them to the Nevada desert, where they meet a man who has turned into
the last thing anyone expected him to become …

 

David Gold. Reno, 1930. A Bible-school dropout known as the Pummelin’
Preacher. His boxing career is fading, just like his faith. But then a
former call girl shows up, tells him about the rag-tag congregation
she’s part of; how their pastor was murdered. And that the Spirit is
moving and David’s destiny is to lead their tiny flock.

 

Las Vegas, 2011. Cable TV star Tim Faber is an atheist bent on proving God
is only alive in people’s imaginations. But Joan Reed, his producer,
is trying to recapture the faith of her youth. And both of them are driven
to unravel a mystery surrounding the Big Bang theory, never dreaming the
answer will forever change their lives.

To do that, they have to meet with the now 99-year-old Luke Noongwook and
David Gold’s grandson, Daniel.

The veil is being pulled back, but none of them are prepared for what
they’ll find on the other side.

 

 

“Lederman’s powerful debut interlaces three stories that span
nearly a century and are tied together by a church of outcasts in Las
Vegas…Readers of inspirational fiction will love this moving story that
affirms the power of God’s mercy.”

–Publisher’s Weekly

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 EXCERPT

Chapter One
Luke and Yura: The Alaska Territory, 1925


My father deserted my mother and me when I was thirteen years old. He had become famous that winter on the Great Race of Mercy, one of the Athabascan mushers who brought diphtheria serum to Nome and saved ten thousand lives. He’d done the impossible, a blind run in the howling darkness, crossing the open ice of the Norton Sound, the temperature falling to sixty below, the sun a distant dream. He was our hero, our North Star.

And then he was gone.

He left us, of course, for a woman. A blizzard had hit him at Unalakleet, a storm so powerful that it travelled four thousand miles, till at last it reached New York and froze the Hudson River. The woman lived in just that far-away land, on the wild island of Manhattan, and her name was Kathleen Byrne. The Hearst papers had been giving the Great Race front-page headlines; Kathleen was a reporter, lean and hungry, she’d go to the ends of the earth for a good story, and one day she got her chance.

No one in my hometown of Nenana had seen anything like her, a slender redhead with emerald eyes, smoking Lucky Strikes and exhaling expertly through her nostrils, this coolly confident young woman with fiery hair.

She wanted details that would bring the story to life, so Father brought her to our home to show off his sled dogs. At least, the ones who’d survived, for three he had raised since they were pups had died on the trail. Somewhere in the madness of that journey he’d forgotten to cover their groins with rabbit skins, and they’d perished of frostbite in the unfathomable cold.

I gaped at her stupidly.

“Excuse my son,” said my mother. “He has no manners.”

Eighty-six years have passed since that time, but from old photographs I understand just what my father must have felt. She seemed audacious and yet fragile, and she had the sort of smile that made men who’d known her barely fifteen minutes want to say, if you smile that way at any other man I’ll lose my mind. I’m not talking about lust, you understand; rather, a sort of greed combined with something barely distinguishable from rage.

And what did Miss Byrne want with my father? Ah, but what an outrageous trophy to bring back from the Arctic frontier! His native name was Taliriktug, strong arm, but he went by his English name, Victor. He was sinewy, powerful, and, for an Athabascan, unusually tall. His maternal grandfather had been an Orthodox priest, a Russian who came to Alaska as a missionary and proceeded to lose his faith in a strange new world. He joined some fur traders, then married a native woman, my great-grandmother. All local legend, all stories overheard when my father and his friends had been drinking, for the Russian and his wife both died years before I was born.

When Kathleen left, my father went with her. He said there’d be interviews with The Saturday Evening Post, and on something called radio that could send his voice into a hundred thousand homes, maybe more. He said Miss Byrne had reason to think the Lambert Pharmaceutical Company might pay him a lifetime’s wages for endorsing a product called Listerine. He said he’d write letters and be back in just a few months.

But I was the only one he fooled.

“When will Father return?” I asked incessantly.

“Soon,” my mother said at first, and later, “When the winds that took him blow him home,” and finally she answered me only with silence. I stopped asking, I never spoke of him, though a great grief lay on my heart.

I heard mutterings around the village, but no one dared to say anything against father, for my mother was fiercely loyal to him and loved him with a warrior’s heart. The months passed, winter came again and turned into spring. One day, the Angakkuq paid a visit, and in the low murmuring of voices I heard my father’s name. I saw Mother turn from the old man, her eyes bright with anger. The Angakkuq could commune with spirits, with the elements and animals; had one such spirit snatched away my father’s soul?

At dinner that evening I found the courage to speak.

“Why doesn’t he love us anymore?”

Her eyes met mine and wordlessly we shared our pain. That night I watched as my mother packed our clothes and valuables; the last thing she packed was her ulu knife, a knife she’d received from her father, its handle of musk ox horn.

“Are you going to kill Father?” I asked her.

“Don’t be stupid,” she said. “I’ll bring him back with us in one piece. Everything will be just as it used to be, the two of you will be off hunting caribou when the leaves turn, and of what has happened we shall never speak. But the white woman must die.”

Have I told you my mother’s name? It was Yura, which means beautiful. As for me, I was born Uukkarnit Noongwook, though I have lived here in the Nevada desert for lo these many years, and men have always called me Luke.

 

About the Author

Jess Lederman

After I graduated with a degree in music from Columbia University, a lust
for expensive pianos drew me into an unexpected career in finance. It turned
out that I had a knack for business; I gained much that the world had to
offer and became a hedonist, a gambler who haunted the poker rooms of Las
Vegas, and an arrogant atheist. I’ve written fiction for most of my
life, and at one point I quit work to devote myself to writing a novel.
During that time, my late first wife, Teri, and I lived in Paris, down the
street from where Hemingway once lived, and later in the mountains of Idaho.
But the novel was never published, for my soul had not yet awakened, and I
did not yet have anything important to say. So I went back to the business
world.

One day, when we were living in Dallas, Teri heard a radio interview with
Francis Collins, an eminent scientist who wrote The Language of God, which
tells the story of his journey from atheism to becoming a disciple of
Christ. Collins’ book led us to the writings of C.S. Lewis and George
MacDonald, who became the midwives of our rebirth from above.

There’s no hiding from the Hound of Heaven, once He’s on your
trail!

Several years later, Teri was diagnosed with ALS (Lou Gehrig’s
Disease) and we left Dallas and the business world behind and moved to a
small town in Alaska. There we looked out on the glory of God’s
creation and read to our heart’s content during the last two years of
her life. Faced with tragedy, we learned to trust utterly in Him, and He
blessed us with the peace that surpasses all understanding.

It was after Teri’s death, while I was still living in the far north,
that the idea for Hearts Set Free—which opens in the Alaska Territory
in 1925—was born. People who know that the novel contains
autobiographical elements (and several historical characters) sometimes ask
me, “How much of the story is true?’ And I answer,
“Perhaps twenty percent—and the rest is even more true!”
What drives my writing is the desire to convey truths that transform lives.
Truths of the heart.

In 2013, I met a wonderful woman—my current wife, Ling—and soon
we began talking about having children. “Impossible!” said our
doctors. “According to your test results, there’s no chance at
all, even using the latest techniques.” Of course, within two months
of that pronouncement, Ling was pregnant with little David, who just turned
three, and we subsequently adopted Daniel, who’s now twelve.

After David’s birth, we moved to southwest Washington. I’m
currently at work on a novel that begins in the last days of the Wild West
and ends in Las Vegas in 1955. When I’m not writing or chasing my sons
around, can usually be found at the piano playing Chopin nocturnes for
Ling.

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