One year after the end of
the Civil War, three southerners are heading northwest on the Bozeman Trail to
the gold mining camp at Virginia City. When they find the army has closed the
trail because the Sioux are on the warpath, the three friends accept work at
Fort Phil Kearny. After an Indian ambush, the men flee the fort, together with
a man called Slade. But there is more to Slade than meets the eye, and when he
is revealed as a hired gun and murderer the southerners are drawn into the hunt
to apprehend him to clear their names.
Death on the Bozeman starts off with three Southerners
after the Civil War. They are an affable bunch and the reader quickly falls
into the familiarity that they share with each other. However, the story quickly widens up to
include a larger than life bad guy, some crooked vice peddlers in a gold town,
Union soldiers, and a larger than life man write out of the history books, Jim
Bridger. The pace is swift and always forward moving, the action comes swiftly,
and the reader will be satisfied with the ending as everyone gets what’s coming
to them.
The classic traditional western is alive and
well in Black Horse Westerns
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