The Greatest Western Writers Of The 21st Century
Into a lawless town rode a hero named John Henry Sixkiller. Only William
W. Johnstone with J. A. Johnstone could tell a tale of violence and
vengeance so real, so raw, it outdoes the legends of Old West justice
that inspired it.
On The American Frontier, History Is Written By Bullets
It was there for the taking: $75,000 in gold bullion, the combined
payrolls of three productive gold mines, just waiting to be stolen from
under the noses of a bickering sheriff and city marshal. Billy Ray
Gilmore and his band of kill-crazy outlaws have a plan to do it,
too--that is, until Sixkiller comes to town. Hiding his badge to conceal
his identity as a U.S. marshal, Sixkiller goes undercover to smoke out
the culprits before they strike. But in this town full of two-legged
rattlesnakes, deadly surprises lurk behind every saloon door. To keep
from being bitten, Sixkiller will have to lay a few traps of his own.
Lucky for him, what this town lacks in law, it makes up for in guns--and
dynamite.