Award-winning, critically acclaimed author Terrence Mccauley has drawn comparisons to Elmore Leonard for his skilled writing of traditional historical Westerns with a crime fiction soul.
Boggs. -- Johnny D.
Blood on the Trail is one wild, entertaining ride.
McCauley\'s Westerns move at a pace that leaves readers sweating and out of breath.
Marshal Halstead...
And if he must, he\'ll put everyone in Silver Cloud six feet under--including Deputy U.
S.
He wants Hudson dead and buried so he can become the leader of the gang.
He\'s spent his whole criminal life in John Hudson\'s shadow.
Except for Ed Zimmerman.
Unable to trust the sheriff to back his play, Halstead finds himself standing alone against Hudson\'s gang as they slip into town, recruiting gunmen to help free their leader.
But the folks in Silver Cloud are none too happy playing host to the lawman or his kill-crazy prisoner.
It\'s a place where he can keep a lock on his prisoner while figuring out how to get past Hudson\'s gang alive.
Halstead puts the blast on them, but outnumbered and outgunned, he has little choice but to hole up in an old mining town known as Silver Cloud, Montana.
Marshal Jeremiah Halstead is escorting notorious outlaw John Hudson across the territory for trial when he\'s ambushed by a pack of Hudson\'s men anxious to rescue their partner from his custody.
Deputy U.
S.
And a place where a lawman has to watch his back before some hardcase empties his pistol into it.
A mining town welcome to all seeking to make their fortune. and Jeremiah Halstead is a lawdog to fog the outlaw Trail with! -- Peter Brandvold, author of The Cost of Dying Silver Cloud, Montana. . .
Blood on the Trail is one action-packed, western .
He may be the newest Deputy Marshal in the Montana Territory, but it doesn\'t take long for him to find himself in a mess of trouble...
Now he brings his signature historical accuracy, three-dimensional characters, and non-stop, adrenaline-fueled action to the first in a brand new series featuring Jeremiah Halstead.
Award-winning, critically acclaimed author Terrence Mccauley has drawn comparisons to Elmore Leonard for his skilled writing of traditional historical Westerns with a crime fiction soul