Author: | Caroline Lockhart | ISBN: | 1230000225978 |
Publisher: | AGEB Publishing | Publication: | March 17, 2014 |
Imprint: | Language: | English |
Author: | Caroline Lockhart |
ISBN: | 1230000225978 |
Publisher: | AGEB Publishing |
Publication: | March 17, 2014 |
Imprint: | |
Language: | English |
Contents
The Lady Doc (1912)
The Dude Wrangler (1921)
The Fighting Shepherdess (1919)
The Man from the Bitter Roots (1915)
'Me-Smith' (1911)
The Man from the Bitter Roots (1915)
You'll enjoy the funny wise sayings of Uncle Billy, and the weird characters of Hinds Hotel,--a tense eagerness will hold you, as you read of the blizzard in the mountains, of Bruce Burt throwing the Mexican wrestling champion, of the reckless feat of shooting the Roaring River with the dynamos, and throughout every scene in this story of the power, quiet, competent Bruce Burt. It's a big outdoor story.
'Me-Smith' (1911)
"Smith" is one type of Western "Bad Man," an unusually powerful and appealing character who grips and holds the reader through all his deeds, whether good or bad. It is a story with red blood in it. There is the cry of the coyote, the deadly thirst for revenge as it exists in the wronged Indian toward the white man, the thrill of the gaming table, and the gentleness of pure, true love. To the very end the tense dramatism of the tale is maintained without relaxation. (Lockhart's first novel.)
The Fighting Shepherdess, loosely based on the life of sheepherder Lucy Morrison Moore, was made into a movie starring Lenore J. Coffee, Anita Stewart and William Farnham.[
Contents
The Lady Doc (1912)
The Dude Wrangler (1921)
The Fighting Shepherdess (1919)
The Man from the Bitter Roots (1915)
'Me-Smith' (1911)
The Man from the Bitter Roots (1915)
You'll enjoy the funny wise sayings of Uncle Billy, and the weird characters of Hinds Hotel,--a tense eagerness will hold you, as you read of the blizzard in the mountains, of Bruce Burt throwing the Mexican wrestling champion, of the reckless feat of shooting the Roaring River with the dynamos, and throughout every scene in this story of the power, quiet, competent Bruce Burt. It's a big outdoor story.
'Me-Smith' (1911)
"Smith" is one type of Western "Bad Man," an unusually powerful and appealing character who grips and holds the reader through all his deeds, whether good or bad. It is a story with red blood in it. There is the cry of the coyote, the deadly thirst for revenge as it exists in the wronged Indian toward the white man, the thrill of the gaming table, and the gentleness of pure, true love. To the very end the tense dramatism of the tale is maintained without relaxation. (Lockhart's first novel.)
The Fighting Shepherdess, loosely based on the life of sheepherder Lucy Morrison Moore, was made into a movie starring Lenore J. Coffee, Anita Stewart and William Farnham.[