About this item
"When Comanches killed their fathers, young Sutter "Sut" Lowery and August "Gus" Bell became the primary supporters of their families until their mothers married again. One night, Gus's mother is beaten again by her husband. Gus kills Ben and dumps the body in a sinkhole. That night, Sut and Gus hit out for tall cane. And thus begins the odyssey of Sut and Gus into the world of cattle drives, rustlers, Indians, horses, and manhood. Sut discovers he has inherited his mother's gift of prescience and rescues two white children from a Comanche trap. At the crossing of the Arkansas, Gus and Sut work to eliminate a gang of thugs from control of the ford. In Abilene they attempt to stop a kid from rolling a drunk--and end up wanted by half the town and a bunch of vaqueros.
About the Author
James D. Crownover
James D. Crownover grew up in the woods and on the streams of central Arkansas. He spent many days walking the fields and picking up arrowheads and other artifacts, possibly some of them left by his ancestors. Jim has a keen interest in history, especially that of the West and Southwest. Early on, he became interested in the everyday activities of the pioneers, Indians, and explorers and the oral histories of their adventures. Upon retirement as a Civil Engineer, he began writing a historical novel about four generations of a mixed Cherokee family that migrates from Tennessee to New Mexico Territory in the nineteenth century. The results of this work were four books. The first book is Wild Ran the Rivers, which in 2015 won two Western Writers of America Spurs for best historical novel and best first novel. It is about Mississippi River pirates and slavery and the New Madrid earthquakes of 1811-1812. The other three books are; The Battle of Half Moon Mountain; Picketwire Vaquero which was recognized in 2017 by True West Magazine as Best of the Rest Frontier Fiction; the last of the four is Tales of the Last Frontier. His fifth book, Triple Play is about a young man and his quest to avenge his father's murder by cattle thieves. It was finalist in the Will Rogers Medallion Awards and also the 2017 New Mexico-Arizona Book Awards. The Ox That Gored is about Judge Isaac Parker's Deputy US Marshals, and his seventh published book, If These Walls Could Talk, is newly released. Jim lives in Northwest Arkansas and continues writing western frontier historical novels.
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