|
Showing 1 - 15 of
15 matches in All Departments
Lee Strate has been shot and left for dead by two men who stole
every penny of his $5000 fortune. His life is saved by Jack, a
freed black man who agrees to help him track down his money.
Heading to Galveston, they discover the thieves are working for the
powerful Colonel Benson. Lee and Jack discover that Colonel Benson
is involved in agitating racial tension among Galveston s dock
workers, the Cotton Jammers. Telling the white workers that the
blacks are trying to take over, and telling the blacks that the
whites are taking unfair advantage of them, Benson has worked both
parties into a frenzy. The unrest is likely to come to a head just
when President Grant is due in town.The hunt for the thieves
becomes deadly, and Lee and Jack begin to realize the shattering
implications of the sinister political plot that has enmeshed them
all."
Lizzie Randall, the preacher s pretty daughter, has been discovered
brutally murdered. The young Mexican boy Paco Morales is found
close to the scene making him a convenient scapegoat to hang for
the heinous crime. When the town drunkard Willie Turner claims that
Morales is innocent, Sheriff Ward Vincent is forced to investigate
the heinous crime more closely. As his investigation progresses,
the dark underbelly of the small western town is exposed, and the
guilty seem to outnumber the innocent."
When Ryan came riding back into Tularosa people gawped in
disbelief. The power-players in town wanted him out of town whether
by horse or by casket. His old friends welcomed him, but their
faces were shadowed with doubt and hard questions. Why could he
make it back to town to see his sister s killer hang when he couldn
t be bothered to stay and support her against the treacherous Kane
brothers when she was still alive? It doesn t take Ryan long to
realize that Billy Kane, who stands to hang, is not his sister s
killer. He focuses his attention on the men who first ran him out
of town, certain that they know the killer s identity. No matter
how long it takes, Ryan is determined to avenge his sister s death
and bring her murderer to justice. This time he s not going to
allow the powerful forces that control most everything in Tularosa
hide the truth."
Ray Storey left Kansas for one reason: revenge. Assuming the role
of Kit Carson in a Medicine Show that travels to small towns around
East Texas, he hunts down Sam Hawkins, the brutal murderer of
Storey's innocent younger brother. As Ray finally arrives in the
same town as his quarry, he is faced with the harsh reality that he
might not have the wit or courage to bring the cruel Hawkins
brothers to justice. When a man is killed and a woman kidnapped,
Storey must throw away his act and shoot with real bullets, or his
own life and honor will be forfeit.
Welcome to Wolf Creek. Here you will find many of your favorite
authors, working together as Ford Fargo to weave a complex and
textured series of Old West adventures like no one has ever seen.
Each author writes from the perspective of his or her own unique
character, blended together into a single novel. In our latest
adventure, Wolf Creek is threatened by marauding Kiowa warriors who
seek to avenge the deaths of their comrades at the hands of buffalo
hunters. While the town fortifies itself, and a cavalry detachment
looks for the raiders, the stage from Wichita is attacked -leaving
a handful of Wolf Creek citizens alone and on foot in hostile
territory... About the author: Beneath the mask, Ford Fargo is not
one but a posse of America's leading western authors who have
pooled their talents to create a series of rip-snortin', old
fashioned sagebrush sagas. Saddle up. Read 'em Cowboy These are the
legends of Wolf Creek. Appearing as Ford Fargo in this installment:
Bill Crider, Jackson Lowry, Kerry Newcomb, Troy D. Smith, Frank
Roderus, Robert J. Randisi
DEATH MARCH OF THE DANCING DOLLS is the third volume of the series:
Day Keene in the Detective Pulps. It is introduced by Texas' own
Bill Crider and has a cover by Gavin L. O'Keefe. Day Keene is
well-known for his hardboiled novels but his short stories from the
pulps are almost completely forgotten, until now. This volume
contains these stories: Stay As Dead As You Are, Detective Tales,
October 1946 The Charlie McCarthy Murders, Detective Tales, March
1942 Doc Egg's Graveyard Reunion, Dime Mystery, February 1946 Death
March of the Dancing Dolls, Dime Mystery, September 1945. So Sorry
You Die Now, Dime Mystery, January 1945 A Minor Matter of Murder,
Short Stories, Dec 25, 1945 Mighty Like a Rogue, Dime Detective,
January 1950
|
|