The Burden of Knowing: Why Frank F. Fiore’s Cowboy Detective Carries More Than a Gun
- haleyn4
- May 19
- 1 min read

There’s a certain weight that comes with chasing the truth.It doesn’t always make you a hero.It just makes you willing.
In Jonathan Smyth Cowboy Sleuth: The Case of the Screaming Tunnel, Frank F. Fiore doesn’t just give us a mystery to solve—he gives us a man who can’t let lies live, even when it means carrying the emotional wreckage that comes with knowing too much.
Jonathan Smyth doesn’t seek the truth to feel righteous.He seeks it because it’s the only thing he trusts.
Some Men Wear Their Scars on the Inside
Smyth doesn’t show off.He doesn’t rant.He doesn’t ask for sympathy.
But Fiore writes him with enough restraint that readers feel the burden anyway.The cases that went unsolved.The justice that never came.The silence he had to walk away from because no one else wanted to hear the truth.
It’s that quiet pain—never named but always present—that makes Smyth realer than most detectives.
The Screaming Tunnel Isn’t the Only Thing That Echoes
When Smyth enters the tunnel, it’s not just the legend he’s up against—it’s the whole town’s decision to stop asking questions. They want to believe in curses. They want the scream to be a ghost.
Because believing in ghosts is easier than admitting someone you know did this.
And Smyth knows:
The more people avoid truth, the more dangerous it becomes
The longer lies live, the louder they echo
And the closer he gets, the more the town will push back
Why This Character Stays With You
Frank F. Fiore created Smyth not just as a puzzle-solver, but as a moral reckoner.
He shows up not to rescue—but to reveal.He doesn’t just find answers. He holds them. Carries them. Leaves changed by them.
And so do we.
Because when the case is over, Smyth walks away alone—but he takes something from us with him. A little discomfort. A little reflection. A little fire that says, “What would I do in a place built on silence?”
Conclusion: The Strongest Men Don’t Raise Their Voices—They Raise the Truth
Frank F. Fiore’s Cowboy Sleuth series isn’t about classic heroes or cheap scares.It’s about the cost of knowing, and the courage it takes to keep asking questions when you already know the answer might ruin everything.
Jonathan Smyth doesn’t chase villains.He confronts communities.And sometimes, that’s the loneliest—and bravest—thing a man can do.
📚 Pick up the book and follow the quietest man in the West into the loudest lie a town has ever told.🔗 Available now on Amazon







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