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Showing 1 - 4 of
4 matches in All Departments
Lawman or outlaw? Black-hatted "villains" and white-hatted "good
guys" of the Old West walk the streets of our imagination.
Hollywood draws a convenient line in the Western dirt,
differentiating between the two. But in reality, at times it was
difficult, if not impossible to distinguish who was who. Shadowy
faces roamed the West. When Outlaws Wore Badges explores the world
of lawman and outlaw wrapped into one person. At times the badge
speaks, other times-the gun. Living in the Old West was not easy.
Often, law and justice were left behind in the east, when men
migrated to the open lands of the West. Some men took advantage of
fluid regulations while others found themselves helping to invent
and enforce law and order. A few men did both.
Many stories have been written about the exploits of Billy the Kid,
the charismatic outlaw of the Old West. Some have been pure
fiction, designed to entertain and excite. Purple prose writers
began chronicling the exploits of Billy as early as the late 1870s.
Others have been biographical, researched by historians or recorded
by those who knew him, including his murderer, Sheriff Pat Garrett.
But there was once a different side to the famous gunfighter, a
softer more artistic side that seems at odds with Billy's
reputation for shooting, killing, and robbing. Born Henry McCarty,
he was also known by the names Henry Antrim, Kid Antrim, and
William H. Bonney. He didn't shoot twenty-one men, as has been
claimed. Four is a more likely number, three in self-defense. In
Before Billy the Kid, author Melody Groves explores the early life
of the infamous outlaw, the teenage boy who loved to sing and
dance. The young man who was polite, educated, and popular. A boy
who had the bad luck to be orphaned at fifteen and left with no one
to guide him through life. How different history might have been if
Billy had pursued his love of music instead of a life of crime.
Don't miss the next exciting series entry following KANSAS BLEEDS
and BLACK RANGE REVENGE Battling a wild horse, poisoned water,
aggravated Apache, a fanatical Army officer, and other
life-threatening trials, the four Colton brothers refuse to turn
their three thousand longhorns around and head back to Mesilla.
Determined to deliver the contracted beeves to Tin Town,
California, James Colton drives men and cattle as hard and as fast
as he can. The brothers hope to celebrate the end of the Civil War
and the cattle drive by hoisting a beer in Tin Town. But Whid
MacGilvry has other ideas. Killing James is not enough to exact his
revenge. Destroying the entire Colton family will have to do. And
where better than out on the range?
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