The author enriches his tale, based on the Tuttle's Dance Hall Massacre of 1871 in Newton, Kansas, with parallel stories of a family of Texas cowboys, a woman restauranteur struggling to set up shop in Newton, and a newspaper woman from the Wichita Times, more-or-less exiled to Newton in order to get her out of the editor’s hair. As the individual stories build, they are braided together toward a fascinating climax. The period detail is well rendered, the characters are believable and distinct, and the violence is rendered so masterfully that it can cause chills.
WINNER OF THE 2025 SPUR AWARD FOR BEST HISTORICAL WESTERN NOVEL
Inspired by the shocking true story of the Gunfight at Hide Park, this blazing Western novel by Spur Award–winner Johnny D. Boggs takes readers back to that fateful summer in 1871—when Newton, Kansas, became “the wickedest town in the west” . . .
A decade before the legendary Gunfight at OK Corral, there was a much bloodier showdown with a much bigger body count—and Wichita Herald reporter Cindy Bagwell was there to see it all. At first, the fledgling journalist had no idea why her boss would send her…
Marc Cameron is a master at thrillers, both his series featuring Jericho Quinn and his Tom Clancy novels featuring Jack Ryan. This book is from another series featuring Arlis Cutter, a deputy United States marshal working in Alaska. Between the cold and deadly winter landscapes of the interior of Alaska, which play a major role, and the chilling violence in the story, readers may need a blanket.
Deputy U.S. Marshals Arliss Cutter and Lola Teariki brave a brutal and unforgiving Alaskan winter on a desperate manhunt that takes a blood-chilling twist in New York Times bestselling author and former U.S. Marshal Marc Cameron's breathless, taut new wilderness adventure thriller for fans of Paul Doiron, CJ Box, Taylor Moore, and William Kent Krueger.
Deputy U.S. Marshals Arliss Cutter and Lola Teariki are at frozen Cheney Lake, finally nearing their prey. He's Butch Pritchard, a killer-for-hire as ruthless as the Anchorage wind, and wanted for the murder of a 25-year-old pregnant woman in Missouri. A cruel hit orchestrated by…
A nonfiction book about attempts to erect wind turbines to generate electricity, the author tells the stories of several people, representing all sides of the disputes, who are involved. She makes complex issues understandable, and makes a complicated story accessible. In the end, it seems that right or wrong are not factors in the decision making, but that the power that comes wealth and privilege outweighs other considerations. The "Crazies" of the title refers to a mountain range, but readers may come to think it is commentary on some of the people whose stories she tells.
“Yellowstone meets Matlock” (Tom Clavin) in this dazzling tale of land lust and the American West, chronicling the rise and fall of a wind farm that triggers a 21st century range war between a struggling fifth-generation rancher and the billionaires next door.
Most locals in Big Timber, Montana, learn to live with the wind. Rick Jarrett sought his fortune in it. Like his pioneer ancestors who staked their claims in the Treasure State, he believed in his right to make a living off the land—and its most precious resource, million-dollar wind.
Trouble was, Jarrett's neighbors were some of the wealthiest…
On a lonely road in a remote desert stands a roadhouse. Formerly a home station on a now abandoned stagecoach route, it is the only source of water and supplies for miles. Accommodations are crude and coarse, the hospitality rough and raw, the proprietor boorish and vulgar. Travelers are few and far between, and almost all must stop for water—which comes at a price. A mounted mail carrier who visits the roadhouse with some regularity suspects there is more to the place than meets the eye, and he comes to believe that for some travelers the roadhouse is the end of the road.