Best Louis L'Amour Westerns

When his experimental aircraft is forced down in Russia and he escapes a Soviet prison camp, he must call upon the ancient skills of his Indian forebears to survive the vast Siberian wilderness. Proving that he is above all a great raconteur, the prolific L'Amour sets his latest in Siberia where a downed American test pilot, Joseph "Joe Mack" Makatozi, has been taken after his capture by the Russians. Joe Mack is a classic American hero, thrown back into the wilderness and forced to rely on his wits and his ancestral skills to survive the deadly cold and elude his Soviet pursuers, including his nemesis, a Siberian tracker.
Reviews
Find Best Price at Amazon"First, there were a lot of characters with Russian names that I had a hard time keeping up with. It is what it is, but I wish that L'Amour had spent just a little more time and developed the ending a little."
"I agree with many of the commentators that this book was too repetitious and that it has an abrupt ending."
"It remains a classic tale of a man coming to grips with himself in dangerous situations."
"Way too much left unresolved in this book."
"This story could have been a stem winder story, but the reader was left leaking enthusiasm across the wilderness of repetition."
"I got a good idea about life in Siberia during the Stalin period and the struggle of the cultured Russians to flee the oppressive regime and seek freedom away from Russia."
"The late Mr Louis L'Amour lives up to his reputation as a brilliant author with, "Last Of The Breed"."
"This is a gripping story... such a great historical depiction of the Cold War that renders the reader riveted, looking forward to a classic Louis ending, only to be denied."

Now this rollicking eBook bundle collects the three full-length Kilkenny novels alongside three essential shorter pieces: KILKENNY. THE RIDER OF LOST CREEK. THE MOUNTAIN VALLEY WAR. WEST OF DODGE (SHORT STORY). MONUMENT ROCK (NOVELLA). A GUN FOR KILKENNY (SHORT STORY) Kilkenny wasn’t looking for trouble when he entered the Clifton House stage station, but trouble found him when a reckless youngster named Tetlow challenged him, drew his gun, and paid for it with his life.
Reviews
Find Best Price at Amazon"With these books, you not only have the classic Louis L'Amour situations with the good guy fighting the bad guy, a life-threatening conflict, the good guy wins and gets the girl, you also get more of a historical educational aspect of the life and times of early America and will learn a thing or two."
"The ending may be predictable as with most of L'Amour's books, but if you're a dyed-in-the-wool L'Amour fan it's how it gets there that's always got you flipping through the pages as fast as you can!"
"Kilkenny is a typical L'Amour hero; tough, brave, courageous, cares about the underdog and tries hard to play down his gun fighting reputation."
"But, during his time in the West, a shooting was a simple way to resolve differences and this was accepted. He is also in love with a kind, beautiful woman but he is afraid to spend much time around her, since she could be killed because of him; because some young kid learns his true name and then decides he will kill Kilkenny so everyone will think he is "Bad Man," which really means that he is a bad man to mess with or he could kill you with a fast, accurate draw. This is another Louis L'Amour Winner!"
"That is if you like westerns!"
"Louis L,Amour has that great talent of being able to set up the scene in your head."
"Good story with good characters, though I felt some of the conversations fell a bit flat-a little abbreviated for the period of time they should have covered(for example-a 1 minute exchange while a character consumes an entire meal), as well as somewhat abrupt in their ending at times."
"The Lance Kilkenny tales are typical of the other good versus evil and the triumphs of the tough and courageous pioneers that opened up the West."

After discovering six gold Roman coins buried in the mud of the Devil’s Dyke, Barnabas Sackett enthusiastically invests in goods that he will offer for trade in America. Son of a feared fighting man, Barnabas Sackett inherited his father's fiery temper, sense of justice and warrior skills.
Reviews
Find Best Price at Amazon"Most of his stories read like short stories and are quick reads."
"LOVE LOUIS L'AMOUR, EVERY THING I EVER READ OF HIS IS GREAT, THIS STARTS OFF HIS SACKETT BOOKS AND STARTS IN ENGLAND, TELLS OF A MANS JOURNEY TO A NEW LAND AND FALLING IN LOVE WITH A LADY, THE NEXT BOOK TELLS MORE OF HIS LIFE AND LATER BOOKS TELL THE PROGRESSION OF SACKETT'S FAMILY THROUGH THE YEARS INTO THE OLD WEST."
"I read this beginning of the Sackett family series many years ago and enjoyed it just as much now as then."
"Rereading this book from years ago because it largely takes place in Eastern North Carolina and I moved here about 5 years ago."
"I enjoyed reading the story that began it all for the Sackett saga and am looking forward to reading the next story in the series."
"Must read."
"I already own the whole series read it 30 years ago."
"I HAVE read his books since I were a lad."
Best Christian Westerns

Culver Daniels spent years cultivating a peaceful, orderly existence with his blacksmith shop and livery business. He could quickly grow accustomed to staring into eyes that held such mesmerizing flecks of amber light among their glossy depths. A few more steps back and forth and Culver decided the old woman was not only a fair dancer, but also the most irritating person he’d encountered in a long while. “You, Mr. Daniels,” she said in a soft, alluring voice that melted Culver’s insides and turned his brain to mush. “You’re even more beautiful than I dreamed, Miss Mirga,” Culver said, shocked to discover his tongue joined the rebellion his heart and feet had already staged against his good sense. After spending her formative years on a farm in Eastern Oregon, hopeless romantic Shanna Hatfield turns her rural experiences into sweet historical and contemporary romances filled with sarcasm, humor, and hunky heroes.
Reviews
Find Best Price at Amazon"Culver did not want a wife necessarily, but when he sees Kezia Mirga, he realizes that she is everything he never realized that he wanted and missed having in his life."
"Shanna Hatfield's whimsical style shines in this well written page turning historical romance with delightful characters (gypsy, blacksmith, baby & Cat), believable conflicts and satisfying resolution."
"Shania Hatfield continues the 12 Days of Christmas with the whirlwind romance gypsy/circus performer Kezia and Culver, the local blacksmith of Noelle."
"A woman with a wounded heart, a child, and the prospect of a new husband..... Kenzia, and Jem travel with a group of mail order brides to Noelle."
"Shanna never disappoints with her quirky sense of humor and wonderful stories."
"I enjoyed this book as much as the first."
"What a wonderful story between a blacksmith and a former circus performer."
"I always enjoy the humor that Shanna Hatfield writes into her stories and as always the hero and heroine were perfect for each other."
Best Western Short Stories

This volume kicks off a series that will, when complete, anthologize all of L'Amour’ s short fiction, volume by handsome volume. The spate of previously uncollected L'Amour short stories that have surfaced recently reveal L'Amour's broad talent and ability to master every genre from mystery to sports to mainstream fiction. L'Amour wrote about the big themes--love, courage, loyalty, honor--but he grounded them firmly in the context of daily struggles in an unforgiving land.
Reviews
Find Best Price at Amazon"No surprises in a L’Amour story."
"Maybe I've outgrown Mr. L'Amour or maybe I just like longer tales."
"I think I have read all of his work."
"I've never been much for reading novels or lengthy stories and books."
"My father read Louis L'Amour when I was a kid."
"I have only read some of the stories and, so far, I've found many of the characters to be one-dimensional."
"Large print is nice, but book is HEAVY."
"While he doesn't shy away from portraying the violence that was common in those days, he utilizes it to emphasize the eternal conflict of good and evil."
Best Frontier & Pioneer Western Fiction

TEXAS LONESOME - The McCutcheon Family Series, Book 8. Rio Wells, Texas 1886. Dustin McCutcheon gets the surprise of his life when he comes face-to-face with Sidney Calhoun, the spitfire offspring of his father's worst adversary. Texas Lonesome, book eight of the McCutcheon Family Saga, continues the story of the brave and passionate men and women of Y Knot, Montana, and Rio Wells, Texas, by USA TODAY Best-selling Author Caroline Fyffe. "When it come to western romance, there are only a handful of authors that I completely trust, and Caroline Fyffe is right at the top of that list...She manages to create stories that easily capture my imagination from that proverbial first page, all the way to the last."
Reviews
Find Best Price at Amazon"It has the two families, the McCutcheon’s and the Calhoun’s who used to be best friends and ranchers in Rio Wells, TX for a long time until something happened to the head of the Calhoun family Jock and he blamed Winston McCutcheon. When the judge orders Dustin to be guardian to Sidney’s brother Noah and take him to the Rim Rock Ranch until he earns enough to pay off his debt, Dustin sees only trouble and problems for the family as well as the town. Caroline Fyffe is one of my most beloved and favorite authors and I have read almost all her books and loved everyone of them and couldn't put any of them down until they I finished reading the whole story."
"Ms. Fyffe brings us another exciting read filled with baiting, angry, sorrow and love. Dustin has spent many years fighting the Calhoun’s at every turn they seem to always be in his way at all cattle sales causing trouble. This is not happening when the youngest Calhoun’s gets into trouble and the judge decides he must stay at the McCutcheon ranch. Sidney is still thinking about the hunk of a cowboy that she saw earlier when she walks in the court room and sees him. He really brought this audio to life for me with his smooth deep rich voice that you could listen to all day. There was no background noise or any places where the audio was louder or lower just a very smooth wonderful listen. Snow brings so much too this audio as he puts emotions to the story and paints a picture of Texas and the areas around it. She writes stories that will stay in your mind giving you a smile why you long to be part of the towns she creates. There is no doubt when you pick up one of her books you are in for a roller-coaster ride full of emotions as they bait each other fighting to the finish line. Dustin and Sidney are sure in a pickle as they fight their love trying to stay true to their family. This is one author who gives her heart to her characters with a wonderful rich clean story that pulls you in."
"I’ll not spoil it for you but this book is one of a kind and written with heart that makes you smile and then get tense when something happens. Yes, I really loved this book."
Best Western Horror Fiction

"The fulfilled renown of Moby-Dick and of As I Lay Dying is augmented by Blood Meridian, since Cormac McCarthy is the worthy disciple both of Melville and Faulkner," writes esteemed literary scholar Harold Bloom in his Introduction to the Modern Library edition. "The men as they rode turned black in the sun from the blood on their clothes and their faces and then paled slowly in the rising dust until they assumed once more the color of the land through which they passed." It's a perverse, picaresque Western about bounty hunters for Indian scalps near the Texas-Mexico border in the 1850s--a ragged caravan of indiscriminate killers led by an unforgettable human monster called "The Judge."
Reviews
Find Best Price at Amazon"The people who scoff at McCarthy, this book specifically, don't seem to understand his style. It is not an easy to read piece, a normal article of literature that follows a smooth plot curve with complex, developing characters. In the few interviews, and instances where he has been directly quoted, he explains it -- he's a naturalistic writer. Almost all literature distorts reality in some way for the sake of the "story" and what is supposed to be included in it. But sometimes I want to, and I have to applaud McCarthy on being one of the only people who can open that door in the world of literature."
"I liked this book a lot more than the Road."
"Second time through it, I know I still did not get it all - and I doubt that anyone will, really, regardless of all the talking and writing and thinking literary people may do forever after. Things happen in combat zones that are unexplainable, fantastic, not bounded by what people think of as reality in any way."
"I'm hard pressed to find another book I like as much as this one."
"This is not a Western, although it takes place in the Old West, and it is the kind of book whose story goes beyond its pages and reminds you of what you are--even if you don't like what you see: At the core of this tale is the nature of man, it is cruel and violent and poised to create conflict(some have called it war-like). It is an intense experience to read a sentence with a brutal subject (like the gory killing of Native American babies) that continues on and on, with no diminishing. You can read this in many ways, as a metaphor of the violent growth of the United States of America, or as the descent of man from the innocence of childhood to his end as a fully grown, and very sinful, creature of war. Violence: The situations described while following the Glanton Gang give you a greater appreciation for the type of violecne that existed during this period of time, so we can say that it is part of the novel's setting."
Best Western Science Fiction

Little Britches was the literary debut of Ralph Moody, who wrote about the adventures of his family in eight glorious books, all available as Bison Books. -- Kirkus "1950". Ralph Moody's books should be read aloud in every family circle in America.
Reviews
Find Best Price at Amazon"Even if you've never been to Colorado, I would list this book as a must read."
"So Father, Mother, Grace, Muriel, Philip, Hal, and Ralph rent a ranch on the Fort Logan-Morrison road, near Littleton, CO, not far from Denver. This autobiographical book chronicles their first year which involves settling on the ranch, planting crops, raising animals, meeting neighbors, going to school, experiencing a huge wind storm, and fighting over irrigation rights. Also, several who have read the entire series have noted that the later books, especially after Ralph goes to live with his grandfather in The Fields of Home, are not as good as the earlier ones which detail his childhood because they are more "dark" with lots of bad attitudes which are displayed over and over. Ralph gets in several predicaments and doesn't always make the right choice, but he learns to do better by heeding his father's wise advice, who said, "Any man who says the world owes him a living is dishonest."
"I enjoyed every word of this book and couldn't wait to read the next one in this series."
"What a living, exciting record of life in America a hundred years ago... such a treasure of honesty, , and resourcefulness,, and what a role model for relationships between fathers and sons,."
"I loved that the book teaches such good moral characteristics that inspire people to make good choices and work hard."
"(The farm was near what is now W. Hampden Ave. and S. Harlan St.) Those whose ancestors were homesteaders or sharecroppers will appreciate knowing what sorts of things their kin encountered. The book is classified as autobiographical history; by contrast, Ivan Doig's work (I'm particularly thinking "The Whistling Season" here) is much more literary in its character and plot development, and is proper fiction."
"Great look into early 1900's American History on the frontier."
"Recommend this to anyone who who would be a better parent the example of his father is kind and gentle way of doing things how to teach children is awesome."