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Bad man's trail / Eli Colter.

By: Material type: TextTextPublisher: Thorndike, Maine : Center Point Large Print, 2023Copyright date: ©1931Edition: Center Point Large Print editionDescription: 255 pages (large print) ; 23 cmContent type:
  • text
Media type:
  • unmediated
Carrier type:
  • volume
ISBN:
  • 9781638087342
  • 1638087342
  • 9781638087380
  • 1638087385
Subject(s): Genre/Form: Summary: "Jay Malo was afraid of only three things -- a fouled gun, a lie on his own lips, and a fair-haired woman. From the day that he rode West into Arizona until the day that he reached Lew Sudler's mystery-ridden ranch in Montana, a strange inscrutable hand guided his destiny. In all the great adventures that preceded his last and greatest at the Iron Kettle Ranch, he found the truth of a dimly remembered saying of his dead mother's, that bad men were mostly better than many a good man. Meanwhile, in the ranching country his deeds achieved a heroic and almost legendary fame. The adventures of Clint Fess, the adventure of Red Haney and the unclaimed ransom, or, perhaps more than any other, the great fight and victory over the super-rustling scheme of Phirquist and Ridelle, earned for Jay the title of El Malo Hombre -- The Bad Man."-- Provided by publisher.
Holdings
Item type Home library Collection Shelving location Call number Materials specified Status Date due Barcode Item holds
Large Print Book Large Print Book Main Library Large Print Fiction New WESTERN COLTER, ELI Available 33111011282858
Total holds: 0

Enhanced descriptions from Syndetics:

Jay Malo was afraid of only three things -- a fouled gun, a lie on his own lips, and a fair-haired woman. From the day that he rode West into Arizona until the day that he reached Lew Sudler's mystery-ridden ranch in Montana, a strange inscrutable hand guided his destiny. In all the great adventures that preceded his last and greatest at the Iron Kettle Ranch, he found the truth of a dimly remembered saying of his dead mother's, that "bad men" were mostly better than many a good man. Meanwhile, in the ranching country his deeds achieved a heroic and almost legendary fame.

Regular print version originally published in the U.S. by A. H. King.

"Jay Malo was afraid of only three things -- a fouled gun, a lie on his own lips, and a fair-haired woman. From the day that he rode West into Arizona until the day that he reached Lew Sudler's mystery-ridden ranch in Montana, a strange inscrutable hand guided his destiny. In all the great adventures that preceded his last and greatest at the Iron Kettle Ranch, he found the truth of a dimly remembered saying of his dead mother's, that bad men were mostly better than many a good man. Meanwhile, in the ranching country his deeds achieved a heroic and almost legendary fame. The adventures of Clint Fess, the adventure of Red Haney and the unclaimed ransom, or, perhaps more than any other, the great fight and victory over the super-rustling scheme of Phirquist and Ridelle, earned for Jay the title of El Malo Hombre -- The Bad Man."-- Provided by publisher.

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