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Wagon train west / Lauran Paine.

By: Material type: TextTextSeries: Circle V westernPublisher: Thorndike, Maine : Center Point Large Print, 2016Copyright date: © 2016Edition: First editionDescription: 254 pages (large print) ; 23 cmContent type:
  • text
Media type:
  • unmediated
Carrier type:
  • volume
ISBN:
  • 9781628999426
  • 162899942X
Subject(s): Genre/Form: Summary: Kit Butler and Lige Turner remember the days when they had been welcome at an Indian fire, squatting at a powwow and gorging on half-cooked buffalo hump. But times had changed. Too many whites were moving West and the Indians were embarked on an attempt to throw back the tide. With the fur trade gone, Kit and Lige find themselves guiding a wagon train of thirty wagons with one hundred sixty people -- only seventy-seven were men -- west from Independence, Missouri, to Fort Collins through hostile Indian country. The members of the wagon train felt all this talk about Indians was just a way to keep a firm control over them. After all, none of them had seen any sign of Indians. Only Kit and Lige were aware of the fact that they had been watched for several days. Now, when the train is only a week or so away from Fort Collins, the Indians make their presence known. Recognizing their leader, Kit speaks with him. The terms are simple. If the wagon train turns around and goes back, the chief will guarantee their safety. But if they continue on, there will be a fight. The people are determined to keep going. Outnumbered and out-skilled, they find themselves in a struggle for survival. Will any of them make it to Fort Collins?
Holdings
Item type Home library Collection Call number Materials specified Status Date due Barcode Item holds
Large Print Book Large Print Book Main Library Large Print Fiction WESTERN Paine Lauran Available 33111008405280
Large Print Book Large Print Book Northport Library Large Print Fiction WESTERN Paine Lauran Available 33111007757251
Total holds: 0

Enhanced descriptions from Syndetics:

Kit Butler and Lige Turner remember the days when they had been welcome at an Indian fire, squatting at a powwow and gorging on half-cooked buffalo hump. But times had changed. Too many whites were moving West and the Indians were embarked on an attempt to throw back the tide. With the fur trade gone, Kit and Lige find themselves guiding a wagon train of thirty wagons with one hundred sixty people -- only seventy-seven were men -- west from Independence, Missouri, to Fort Collins through hostile Indian country. The members of the wagon train felt all this talk about Indians was just a way to keep a firm control over them. After all, none of them had seen any sign of Indians. Only Kit and Lige were aware of the fact that they had been watched for several days.

Kit Butler and Lige Turner remember the days when they had been welcome at an Indian fire, squatting at a powwow and gorging on half-cooked buffalo hump. But times had changed. Too many whites were moving West and the Indians were embarked on an attempt to throw back the tide. With the fur trade gone, Kit and Lige find themselves guiding a wagon train of thirty wagons with one hundred sixty people -- only seventy-seven were men -- west from Independence, Missouri, to Fort Collins through hostile Indian country. The members of the wagon train felt all this talk about Indians was just a way to keep a firm control over them. After all, none of them had seen any sign of Indians. Only Kit and Lige were aware of the fact that they had been watched for several days. Now, when the train is only a week or so away from Fort Collins, the Indians make their presence known. Recognizing their leader, Kit speaks with him. The terms are simple. If the wagon train turns around and goes back, the chief will guarantee their safety. But if they continue on, there will be a fight. The people are determined to keep going. Outnumbered and out-skilled, they find themselves in a struggle for survival. Will any of them make it to Fort Collins?

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