The war was over. It was the spring of 1865 and Matt Bodeen was heading
home to Helmsville, Kentucky. It felt strange for him since he had left
home at the age of fourteen and he had not been back. He had traveled
the west and it had made a man of him. Or so he thought, because the
future held more for him than he could imagine. (Or maybe even more than
you would imagine?)
About the Author:
J. D. Oliver highlights the struggle between good and evil in all his
work, whether it is novels or the Cowboy Poetry he writes and performs.
History, incredible knowledge of the world and the type of people who
inhabit it are all present in his work.
J. D. was born in Montana, where his roots go back to the early 1800's.
Both sets of his grandparents homesteaded in Montana; on his mother's
side, on a dry land wheat farm in Central Montana, Highwood to be exact.
On his father's side it was on a cattle ranch in south central Montana,
in the little town of Edgar, where he went to school with the Crow
Indian children from Pryor, Montana.
He traveled widely in the Navy and worked in the logging industry as
well as an Operating Engineer, building roads and dams. However he
always came back to the homestead during winter to help feed cattle with
his Dad.
J. D. is married with two children, seven grandchildren and four
great-grandchildren. This is J. D. Oliver's seventh book. His first six
titles include: I Awoke to Silence, Wail Not!, Hope Dies Last, As the
Eagle Flies, Trego and The Way Home.