000 01938cam a2200265Ia 4500
001 ocm08644262
003 OCoLC
005 20161129161608.0
008 820730t19811965oncb 000 1 eng d
020 _a0553062093
020 _a9780553062090
040 _aBPL
_cBPL
_dAZD
_dAZU
_dORU
_dOCLCQ
_dCGAVW
_dOCLCG
_dBRENT
_dOCLCQ
050 4 _aPS3523.A446
_bS224 1981
082 0 4 _a813/.52
_219
100 1 _aL'Amour, Louis,
_d1908-1988.
_931124
245 1 4 _aThe Sackett brand /
250 _aLouis L'Amour hardcover collection.
260 _aToronto ;
_aNew York :
_bBantam,
_c1981, c1965.
300 _a130 p. :
_bmap ;
_c24 cm.
490 1 _aThe Louis L'Amour collection
520 _aVan Allen was a strong, arrogant man who rode roughshod over anything that got in his way. Brutal and uncaring with women, he suddenly found himself guilty of an ugly murder and in a panic, tried to cover it up and destroy the evidence. Tell Sackett was a part of that evidence, but he was not going to be easy to get rid of. Allen murdered Tell's wife, Angie, while he was away. When he returned, one of Allen's men shot him and left him for dead. Despite the severity of his wounds, Tell survived. Meanwhile, the word got out that a Sackett was in trouble. When his relatives learned of his predicament, they dropped what they were doing, loaded their guns, and rode to his aid. They included his brother, Orrin, his cousins, Nolen, Parmalee, Flagon, and Galloway. Even his cousin Lando's father, Falcon, raced to join the party, and Tell's old partner, Cap Rountree, was not far behind. Tell outwitted the forty men Allen hired to run him down. When the other Sacketts descended on them like a swarm of angry hornets, Allen found himself alone and is unrepentant to the end. Time period: 1875-1879
650 0 _aWestern stories.
_931153
800 1 _aL'Amour, Louis,
_d1908-1988.
_tLouis L'Amour collection.
_931154
942 _2ddc
_cF
999 _c38102
_d38102