Conagher
A Westerns, Fiction, Historical book. To be a man was to be responsible. It was as simple as that. To be a man...
As far as the eye could see was a vast, empty horizon. Evie Teale had finally accepted that her husband wouldn’t be coming home. Now she and the children were alone in an untamed country where the elements, Indians, and thieves made it far easier to die than to live.Miles away, another solitary soul battled for survival. Conagher was a lean, dark-eyed drifter who wasn’t about to let a gang of rustlers push him around. While searching the isolated canyons for missing cattle, he found notes tied to tumbleweeds rolling with the wind. The bleak, spare words echoed Conagher’s own whispered prayers for companionship. Who was this mysterious woman on the other side of the wind? For Conagher, staying alive long enough to find her wasn’t going to be easy.
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- Filetype: PDF
- Pages: 208 pages
- ISBN: 9780553281019 / 553281011
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More About Conagher
To be a man was to be responsible. It was as simple as that. To be a man was to build something, to try to make the world about him a bit easier to live in for himself and those who followed. You could sneer at that, you could scoff, you could refuse to acknowledge it, but when it came right down to it, Conn decided it was the man who planted a tree, dug a well, or graded a road who mattered. Louis L'Amour, Conagher
I am interested in trying more westerns. This genre is new to me, and I am pleasently surprised by the simple stories filled with morality, and pathos and sensitivity I didn't expect. One of the great pieces of literature, at the same time embodying and transcending the Western novel. And certainly at the top of L'amour's output.It is an exciting book, to be sure, but also a brilliant and touching study of love, compassion and justice. In its skillful simplicity, it touches the heart and reminds us of an often unmentioned,... While I liked the story well enough, I didn't find this quite as well written as some other L'Amour books I enjoyed morethe style was a bit jerky and abrupt, the dialogue somewhat stilted. Good enough, but not my favorite L'Amour.