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William MacLeod Raine

    William MacLeod Raine schuf fesselnde Abenteuergeschichten, die tief in der amerikanischen Prärie verwurzelt sind. Sein Schreiben zeichnet sich durch akribische Detailgenauigkeit und einen handwerklichen Ansatz aus, was seine Hingabe an sein Werk widerspiegelt. Raines Erzählungen lassen die Leser in die Welt der amerikanischen Grenze eintauchen und erwecken ihre rauen Landschaften und überzeugenden Charaktere zum Leben. Seine produktive Schaffenszeit und die anhaltende Anziehungskraft seiner Westernromane haben seinen Platz als bedeutende Stimme des Genres gefestigt.

    William MacLeod Raine
    This Nettle Danger
    Bucky O'Connor: A Tale of the Unfenced Border
    Long Texan: A Western Duo
    Wyoming
    Roads of Doubt
    Der Revolutionsgeneral
    • Roads of Doubt

      • 500 Seiten
      • 18 Lesestunden
      4,0(2)Abgeben

      In the early 1920s Jarvis Elliott is trying to build a railroad through Gateway Pass in the Rockies, a feat which many consider impossible. If he is successful, it will cut two hundred miles off the transcontinental route and open up a vast virgin region to settlement. His daughter, Joyce, is the product of country clubs, motor cars, and fast living and, further, she is in love with Ordway, who is her father's enemy.

      Roads of Doubt
    • Wyoming

      A Story Of The Outdoor West

      • 196 Seiten
      • 7 Lesestunden
      3,9(9)Abgeben

      The book is a facsimile reprint of a scarce antiquarian work, preserving its historical significance despite potential imperfections like marks and marginalia due to its age. This edition aims to protect and promote cultural literature, ensuring accessibility through high-quality reproductions that remain true to the original text.

      Wyoming
    • Long Texan: A Western Duo

      • 500 Seiten
      • 18 Lesestunden
      3,0(5)Abgeben

      Set against the backdrop of Arizona, this collection features strong and silent cowboys who rely on their intelligence and resourcefulness to confront bullies. The stories emphasize clever strategies over violence, showcasing the characters' resilience and moral fortitude in the face of challenges.

      Long Texan: A Western Duo
    • This Nettle Danger

      • 500 Seiten
      • 18 Lesestunden

      "Bruce Sherrill, owner of a small ranch, leads the underdog farmers in their struggle against the big ranchers. When he is wounded in a skirmish, the daughter of one of the ranchers hides him and struggles between her love for him and loyalty to her family"--

      This Nettle Danger
    • Saddlebum

      • 500 Seiten
      • 18 Lesestunden

      A drifting rider . . . a strange cow town . . . and a whisky-soaked mob, unwilling to give the drifter time to prove his alibi in a dry-gulch killing.

      Saddlebum
    • The Black Tolts

      • 500 Seiten
      • 18 Lesestunden

      "The Tolt Brothers made history when they robbed two trains at the same time. Now they will became a legend when they rob two banks at once"--

      The Black Tolts
    • Gunsmoke Trail

      • 500 Seiten
      • 18 Lesestunden

      As a boy he was timid and shy. His parents had named him Percy, which didn’t bode well for him. But a little red-haired girl with pigtails gave him the name ’ ’ Moran. Having learned boxing in college, instinct took over and Tim soon learned he was beaten. By another freak of luck, Peter saved Tim’s life on the battlefield and received a citation for bravery. Although toughened by the war, Peter Moran was still timid and shy, no ruffian, no dime-novel hero.

      Gunsmoke Trail
    • Trail's End

      • 336 Seiten
      • 12 Lesestunden

      Jim Silcott was filling in as editor of the Powder Horn Sentinel after the former editor and owner, Carl Rogers, had been shot down from ambush because he dared to buck the mighty Hat T gang. And Jim was carrying on Rogers's fight against dictatorial Russell Mosely in the feud over the conflicting land grants to former Spanish landholders which affected the lives of nearly all the settlers on Tincup Creek. He had carried it to the point where his own life was worth not much more than a dime.

      Trail's End