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This is the honest, down-to-earth, sweet-stained poetry from folks
used to being up to their knees in real B.S. The second collection
of cowboy poetry in a series, "Still Rhymin'" offers readers
another look into the lives of real cowboys. Simple and sincere,
these poems range from humorous to heart-breaking as Mike Puhallo
and Brian Branno put their pens to paper again. Award-winning
cowboy cartoonist Wendy Liddle is back, providing wonderful and
whimsical art which is the perfect compliment to the poetry.
The third collection of cowboy poetry in a series, Can't Stop
Rhymin' On the Range offers readers a look into the lives of real
cowboys and girls. Silly and sensitive, happy and hardluck, these
folks tell it like it is. Award winning cowboy cartoonist Wendy
Liddle is back, providing wonderful and whimsical art that is the
perfect complement to the poetry of Mark Puhallo and Brian Brannon.
This book will be enjoyed by anyone who has ever dreamt of ten
gallon hats and little doggies.
In his latest collection, cowboy poet extraordinaire Mike Puhallo
continues scouting cowboy territory, rounding up new rhymes to
entertain and engage his readers.
These are actual stories, about actual happenings in the life of
Canada's working cowboys.
Cowboy poet, artist and raconteur, Mike Puhallo continues his
poetic exploration of the cowboy and modern life. At various times
in his life a working cowboy, saddlebronc rider, horse trainer,
packer and truck driver, he is also a respected western painter. He
has combined a lifelong love of words with the cowboy yarning
tradition to produce sometimes silly, sometimes serious, and always
entertaining poems from the heart. This sixth collection of his
work once again benefits from the witty cartoons and caricatures of
Wendy Liddle, whose work delightfully enhances Mike's words.
This collection of memories is fan echo of the stories Bette Wolfe
Duncan heard as a granddaughter of early Montana and North Dakota
pioneers. These are accounts of a time when the great buffalo herds
still thundered through the valleys, when Cheyenne and Crow still
canped aroung the Yellowstone River, when mountain men and cowboys,
prospectors and miners, rustlers and vigilantes still populated
Russell Country.
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