MAX BRAND CRUSADER (1924)
Facing the Mob!
Doc Cambert called: “Hey you. . . Camden!”
The big man yawned in their faces and made no other reply except to shut his strong white teeth with a click.
“We’ve come to give you a runnin’ chance! Come out of that there brush and we’ll give you a twenty-yard start on the hosses to get back to the hotel. If you make it. . . you got an hour to get out of town. If you don’t make it. . . .”
“Shut up, Doc,” cut in Josh Williams. He don’t get no runnin’ chance. We’ve had enough of that devil. We’ve had too damned much.”
“You want me?” Camden said. “Then come and take me!” With that, he stepped forth from the shelter of the trees and began to walk toward the hotel, slowly.”
They trooped their horses after him, but no man spoke, no man moved a hand. There was something too formidable about the light-footed bulk—that terribly soft-stepping monster of a man. He seemed capable of leaping at them like a mountain lion. They held their distance until Josh Williams, with a shout as though at a roundup, whirled the noose of his rope and spurred forward.
Published on September 21, 2015 13:48
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Tags:
classic-westerns, maxbrand, paperbackwesterns, pulpfiction
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Zane Grey's The Heritage of the Desert--How Zane Grey became an author
When Ripley Hitchcock handed Zane Grey a contract in 1910 for Heritage of the Desert, Grey knew he had arrived as an author. He kept the contract through the years as a treasured memento. Selling the
When Ripley Hitchcock handed Zane Grey a contract in 1910 for Heritage of the Desert, Grey knew he had arrived as an author. He kept the contract through the years as a treasured memento. Selling the first novel to a major publisher was not easy, but it would set the standard as to how Grey’s manuscripts were handled. First, Hitchcock insisted on numerous changes in the story. Then, because magazine publication usually was necessary before book publication, Hitchcock sent the story to Street & Smith’s The Popular Magazine where The Heritage of the Desert ran in five installments in 1910. Then, Harper’s published Hitchcock’s heavily edited manuscript in book form.
For more, read my Historical Dictionary of Westerns in Literature, available at Amazon. ...more
For more, read my Historical Dictionary of Westerns in Literature, available at Amazon. ...more
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