Montana Abbott Series (1-4, 9) by Al Cody
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Overview: Born in Great Falls, Montana, on July 25th 1899, “Al Cody” was a pseudonym of Archie Lynn Joscelyn. Joscelyn went on to become an enormously prolific and popular writer, especially in the western field, but also authoring a number of novels in the detective and romance genres along the way. In addition to the books he wrote under his own name and that of Cody, Archie Joscelyn also used the names A A Archer, Tex Holt, Evelyn McKenna and Lynn Westland.
Genre: Fiction > Mystery /Thriller
#1 – The Texan From Montana
Montana Abbott had tested his courage on the bloody battlefields of the Civil War, sharpened his killer instincts in savage hand-to-hand fighting and had seen enough slaughter to last him forever. But he had promised to drive his brother’s cattle to Missouri and knew he’d have to use all his lethal skills to get back alive. For the trail was held by hostile Indians, who’d had sooner butcher a white man as a cow, and outlaws who had killed for so long, they enjoyed it. Montana figured that if there was any dying to be done, he’d take a lot of men with him.
#2 – Montana’s Territory
The War Between the States did even worse things than pit brother against brother, friend against friend, because they were on different sides in the conflict. For when Confederate soldiers were penned up together as prisoners of war, their nerves frayed by inactivity, pal turned on pal, and violence erupted. And it took their leader, "Montana" Abbott, to restore sanity if not tranquility.
#3 – Gun Song at Twilight
Forsman had had more than his fair share of trouble. His partner had bushwhacked him, taken his gold and his wife and left him for dead. Then he met Montana Abbott, a quiet man whose gun did the talking for him. When Forsman’s enemies started gunning for him, Montana fought back. And when Montana fights, a whole lot of people get killed.
#4 – The Ranch at Powder River
Technically at least, there was a truce if not peace between white man and red. Therefore the man riding along on the big bay cayuse was not prepared for the curdling war whoops which split the air in a frightening cadence. When Montana Abbott saw a whole band of Indians attacking two lone white men, he decided he would have to imitate a whole regiment to scare them off. And that was only the start of his problems …
#9 – The Tail Dies at Sundown
Montana Abbott had seen too much blood-running in his day to tangle with any more trouble. But assassination from ambush was not something he could look away from. There’s an old Western saying that "the tail dies at sundown"—meaning that no matter when a rattlesnake is killed, it never fully expires until the setting of the sun. And Montana knew that that drunken killer would strike again!
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