Judged By Twelve - a western action adventure
Par :Formats :
Disponible dans votre compte client Decitre ou Furet du Nord dès validation de votre commande. Le format ePub est :
- Compatible avec une lecture sur My Vivlio (smartphone, tablette, ordinateur)
- Compatible avec une lecture sur liseuses Vivlio
- Pour les liseuses autres que Vivlio, vous devez utiliser le logiciel Adobe Digital Edition. Non compatible avec la lecture sur les liseuses Kindle, Remarkable et Sony

Notre partenaire de plateforme de lecture numérique où vous retrouverez l'ensemble de vos ebooks gratuitement
Pour en savoir plus sur nos ebooks, consultez notre aide en ligne ici
- FormatePub
- ISBN8224492794
- EAN9798224492794
- Date de parution16/10/2024
- Protection num.pas de protection
- Infos supplémentairesepub
- ÉditeurVirtued Press
Résumé
Fort Smith - Edge of the Indian Territories A last stop for Outlaws, Desperados and Bandits who made the lawless city a land of terror. A young Judge Isaac Parker is assigned to the Western District by President Ulysses Grant with a mission. Clean it up to make way for the St. Louis - San Francisco railroad. The train is coming, civilization on its heels and its Parker's job to prepare the border whether it's ready or not. Against the corrupt Garrison leader. The Saloon Owner. The gangs of bad men that use the tiny town as a base of operations to loot, pillage and plunder. Parker's got help. A crusty Marshal. A freed slave turned tracker in the territories and a wide-eyed idealist turned deputy who only wants a safe place to raise his family. It won't be easy. Work on the frontier never is. Judge Parker's got a fight on his hands and if he has to hang every last bad man in the land to make America safe, he will. Unless they get him first. Download this gripping tale of the old west that will shoot your socks off. Fall in love with the Marshal, root for Rufus and learn why they called Judge Parker the Swinging Judge. AUTHOR'S NOTE: I grew up on Westerns.
My grandfather didn't enjoy them, he was more of a NASCAR fan, but my grandmother did. She was industrious, as a lot of southern women who grew up in the depression era were. I remember a Sunday afternoon matinee on one of the three networks they got on their television that showed a Western each week. After church, she would take my brother and I to Big Chef for burgers and fries, and then back to her house for homemade chocolate pie or some other treat. Saddle up, and let's ride.
My grandfather didn't enjoy them, he was more of a NASCAR fan, but my grandmother did. She was industrious, as a lot of southern women who grew up in the depression era were. I remember a Sunday afternoon matinee on one of the three networks they got on their television that showed a Western each week. After church, she would take my brother and I to Big Chef for burgers and fries, and then back to her house for homemade chocolate pie or some other treat. Saddle up, and let's ride.
Fort Smith - Edge of the Indian Territories A last stop for Outlaws, Desperados and Bandits who made the lawless city a land of terror. A young Judge Isaac Parker is assigned to the Western District by President Ulysses Grant with a mission. Clean it up to make way for the St. Louis - San Francisco railroad. The train is coming, civilization on its heels and its Parker's job to prepare the border whether it's ready or not. Against the corrupt Garrison leader. The Saloon Owner. The gangs of bad men that use the tiny town as a base of operations to loot, pillage and plunder. Parker's got help. A crusty Marshal. A freed slave turned tracker in the territories and a wide-eyed idealist turned deputy who only wants a safe place to raise his family. It won't be easy. Work on the frontier never is. Judge Parker's got a fight on his hands and if he has to hang every last bad man in the land to make America safe, he will. Unless they get him first. Download this gripping tale of the old west that will shoot your socks off. Fall in love with the Marshal, root for Rufus and learn why they called Judge Parker the Swinging Judge. AUTHOR'S NOTE: I grew up on Westerns.
My grandfather didn't enjoy them, he was more of a NASCAR fan, but my grandmother did. She was industrious, as a lot of southern women who grew up in the depression era were. I remember a Sunday afternoon matinee on one of the three networks they got on their television that showed a Western each week. After church, she would take my brother and I to Big Chef for burgers and fries, and then back to her house for homemade chocolate pie or some other treat. Saddle up, and let's ride.
My grandfather didn't enjoy them, he was more of a NASCAR fan, but my grandmother did. She was industrious, as a lot of southern women who grew up in the depression era were. I remember a Sunday afternoon matinee on one of the three networks they got on their television that showed a Western each week. After church, she would take my brother and I to Big Chef for burgers and fries, and then back to her house for homemade chocolate pie or some other treat. Saddle up, and let's ride.