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Paul Colt

    Paul Colt erschafft temporeiche Geschichten rund um historische Charaktere und Ereignisse, die historische Dramatisierung mit charaktergetriebener Action verbinden. Seine politischen Einblicke, militärische Ausbildung und analytische Recherche erwecken die Geschichte zum Leben und schaffen lebendige Charaktere, die bei den Lesern Anklang finden. Colts lebenslange Liebe zum Westen, aufgewachsen auf dem Rücken eines Pferdes, prägt seinen authentischen Erzählstil. Er vertieft sich in seine Recherchen, oft zu Pferd, um sicherzustellen, dass seine Erzählungen ein greifbares Gefühl von Ort und Zeit vermitteln.

    Grasshoppers in Summer
    Assassin's Witness
    • Assassin's Witness

      • 253 Seiten
      • 9 Lesestunden

      "Two powerful railroads clash in a dispute over the Royal Gorge right-of-way to serve a valuable silver strike in Colorado. A reclusive financier with substantial holdings in the Denver & Rio Grande commissions the Knights of Labor to foment labor unrest against rival Atkins Topeka & Southern to delay development of the Royal Gorge spur while the dispute is litigated. Stephen Atkins, owner of the AT&S, turns to Pinkerton for assistance in breaking the strike. Atkins learns financier Eli Chorus is responsible for his labor troubles. He calls on Don Victor Carnicero and his El Anillo crime syndicate to eliminate his Chorus problem. When Great Western Detective League operative Beau Longstreet breaks up the assassination attempt, killing the El Anillo assassin, he becomes the assassin's witness. Don Victor vows vengeance. El Anillo operatives threaten Longstreet's life and the life of his love. Assassin's Witness careens from violent confrontation to diabolical treachery in a deadly hail of bullets shrouded in mystery and tainted in loss"--

      Assassin's Witness
      3,0
    • Grasshoppers in Summer

      • 487 Seiten
      • 18 Lesestunden

      "Grasshoppers in Summer tells the epic story of making and breaking the Fort Laramie Treaty of 1868 as seen through the eyes of opposing political, military, and tribal leaders. Relentless fraud, corruption, and cultural and political pressures frustrated President Grant's effort to reform Indian policy. A conspiracy of military, railroad, and mining interests destroyed the Fort Laramie Treaty, leading to the drumbeat of war. The plains tribes' last great victory at Greasy Grass would win the bitter spoils of total defeat. "They came from the land of the Great Father, as many as grasshoppers in summer. With them the spirits of the people were driven from the land.""--

      Grasshoppers in Summer