In Johnny Bogg's A Thousand Texas Longhorns (Pinnacle 2020), Nelson Story, sometimes entrepreneur, sometimes miner, always a risk-taker, decides that a lot of money can be made moving Texas longhorns north. He's warned of the difficulties, challenges, and impossibility of this task but all that only makes him more determined to do it. With the help of former enemy, Mason Boone, who's run out of options in his own life, they set out to prove everyone wrong.
Johnny Boggs has a reputation for gritty, realistic stories of the Old West and in this one, he doesn't disappoint. There is so much late 1800's atmosphere in this story, you could drown in it. I say that as a compliment. The characters are authentic. The story's day-to-day activities are so believable, I almost got bored reading about them. Life was boring back then. To tell the story accurately, Boggs includes a lot of subplots, all leading eventually to the main plot, like tributaries that dump into the main river. They’re all interesting but don’t expect a focused story with one goal, at least not for a while.
Overall, this is a good story with strong writing and unique characters that tell what happened in the old west.