►We
the People, by Pamela Ackerson.
This is Ackerson's second novel of her
time-travel trilogy. Matthew Standing Deer's greatest challenge—to
protect the People, murder, intrigue and the Wounded Knee Massacre. |
Liar's
Trail, by
C. K. Crigger. Gincy Tate will tell every lie in the book, if
it means avenging her father's murder. |
Me
and My Uncle, by
Miles Archer. A novella about a young gunslinger and his
uncle. There they come to make choices that lead to love...and death. |
To
Hell and Back, by P. A. Bechko. New to the western frontier,
Amanda Clery finds herself suddenly framed for bank robbery by her
employer, the owner of the bank, then rescued by Jake Hollander. But
that's the last rescuing she's going to need, because Amada is going
to learn how to take care of herself! |
The
Tip-Up .22, by
Jerry Tucker. This western story begins shortly after
the Civil War and follows the life of young Kit McKinney as he heads
down the Sacramento River towards his dream city, San Francisco. Kit's
adventures escalate into life and death situations once he reaches his
destination and meets both friend and foe. He has to deal with Mike
Strange, the cold-blooded thief and gunslinger; Chris, the
double-talking murderer; and Joleen, the girl he loves and helps to
reclaim the land stolen from her father. |
Clearwater,
by Bobby R. Woodall. In 1879, murder isn't the only dirty business
going on in Indian territory....
|
Two
Pair Beat Three Deuces, by Hank Valon. Pedro and
Charlie were two cowboys. After traveling north to Kansas with their
boss, a Texas cattleman, they find themselves in the adventure of a
lifetime. |
Wakan
Man, by Frederick W. Boling. Twin
Brothers, one a missionary an the other a doctor, enter the
Lakota Territory. Each will fight for sanity and it will change them
both forever. Set in 1860s Dakota Territory. |
Steiger's
Colt, by Chuck Breuer. Orphaned, Carl
Steiger takes to the trails and is later adopted by Jed Barrette, who
teaches Steiger the horse whisperer's trade. Returning home after
serving in the Civil War, he finds that his father's ranch
has been sold for back taxes. During Steiger's struggle to regain
his ranch, Steiger conceals that he was a veteran of the U.S. Army and
not a former Confederate. This fact and a startling series of events
involving his adoptive father combine to create a surprise ending.
|
The
Claypool Conspiracy,
by Dale Brooks. A young Texas sheriff teams up with a young
doctor in the 1800's in a murder investigation. With ideas from a book
about new technical advances in finding clues scientifically, he is
the first lawman west of the Mississippi to go to trial in a murder
without an eyewitness. It is an uphill fight as local people are
suspicious of these new-fangled ideas from back east. The sheriff not
only has to find these clues, he also has to sell the district
attorney on using them and a jury on believing them.
|
Sammy,
by Chuck Kelly. Once a slave and freed at the end of the
Civil War,
Sammy heads West to pursue his dream of becoming a cowboy... and soon
earns himself a reputation as a gunfighter. |
The
Legend of Lejube Rogue, by Patricia Lucas White.
Book 1 of The Legend of Lejube Rogue. The
pioneers whispered fearsome tales of Lejube Rogue, the white Indian
who ghosted through the untamed land seeking the man who had murdered
his father and seduced his mother. The man Rogue had sworn to kill.
The settlers told many strange tales of the ice-eyed gunfighter and
his incredible deeds, and perhaps some of the tellings were even true. Or
perhaps the truth was stranger still. |
Wolf
Winter,
by Patricia Lucas White.
Book 2 of The Legend of Lejube Rogue. The nights were dark
and long, and when the fires dwindled the pioneers whispered tales of
Lejube Rogue, the white Indian. Rogue sought the man he could never
kill, the fleeing man who could lay claim to nothing but madness, the
dead women who marked his passage across the savage land, and one lone
woman who lived with grief, fear, and the memory of love. |
Manitou,
by Emmet Willard. Fact:
In1847, members of the Cayuse tribe massacred Dr. Marcus Whitmen, his
wife, and twelve missionaries. Fifty-one persons were taken captive.
President Polk sent an army to protect the settlers. Fiction: Angus
Red Elk was attending the mission school on the day of the massacre.
He escaped and began his career as a scout and interpreter for the
first Army Regiment in the West. In the course of Red Elk's
adventures, he discovers a cavern guarded by scorpions, filled with
priceless treasure. |
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