Bandit Years: A Gathering of Wolves

Paperback
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Author: Mark Dugan

ISBN-10: 086534101X

ISBN-13: 9780865341012

Category: Westerns

Live again the days of the Old West when travel was not only rough but dangerous! The days when outlaws lurked behind boulders and along remote trails, ready to trap and rob the unwary drivers and their passengers. Billy LeRoy, Bill Miner, Charley Allison and Hamilton White III all shared a common bond of contempt for the law-abiding life, preferring to become stagecoach robbers. BANDIT YEARS profiles these four unforgettable outlaws who made the Barlow-Sanderson Overland Mail their special...

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Live again the days of the Old West when travel was not only rough but dangerous! Four outlaws made the Overland Marl their special target.Publishers WeeklyThe title of this slim addition to Sunstones' Western Legacy Series is far more compelling than its contents. What might make a passable magazine article is here spun out into 78 pages, plus notes and bibliography. Dugan describes his subjectsfour bandits who preyed on a Colorado stagecoach company in the 1880sin the most tired and hackneyed of phrases that do little to inspire interest in the exploits of the ``desperados.'' (Typically much space is given to lists of court case numbers, prisoner identification numbers and obscure place names.) In fact, the book's liveliest passages are the author's quotations from contemporary newspaper reports. Those wanting to read more about the subject would do better to refer to the primary sources listed in the copious bibliography. Photos not seen by PW. (June)

\ Publishers Weekly - Publisher's Weekly\ The title of this slim addition to Sunstones' Western Legacy Series is far more compelling than its contents. What might make a passable magazine article is here spun out into 78 pages, plus notes and bibliography. Dugan describes his subjectsfour bandits who preyed on a Colorado stagecoach company in the 1880sin the most tired and hackneyed of phrases that do little to inspire interest in the exploits of the ``desperados.'' (Typically much space is given to lists of court case numbers, prisoner identification numbers and obscure place names.) In fact, the book's liveliest passages are the author's quotations from contemporary newspaper reports. Those wanting to read more about the subject would do better to refer to the primary sources listed in the copious bibliography. Photos not seen by PW. (June)\ \