When he kills one of the Flynn clan in self-defense, a hired gun, while on the run, is injured in a shootout and taken in by a rancher who forever changes his life. Original.
Wayne D. Overholser (born September 4, 1906 in Pomeroy, Washington; died August 27, 1996 in Boulder, Colorado) was an American Western writer.
Overholser won the 1953 First Spur Award for best novel for Lawman using the pseudonym Lee Leighton. In 1955 he won the 1954 (second) Spur Award for The Violent Land. He also used the pseudonyms John S. Daniels, Dan J. Stevens and Joseph Wayne.
An interesting story about one mans life and the settling of the west. I have to point out one thing the author made a mistake with- maybe. You'll know what I'm talking about if you read the book. There were milk buckets by the bodies of the men the main characters stepson was accused of killing. The boy claimed the men were dead already when he got there in the early morning, he was hired just to scare them. The defense lawyer said they were killed in the night. The boy was acquitted. But men don't go out in the night to milk. Was this a hint the boy got away with murder?
A WDO. Western Adventure/US Calvary/Indians/A New Town/Profit/Sheriff/A Son
WDO. has. penned a western adventure about a man who no longer wants to be a gunslinger. He leaves the Southwest and heads North. He becomes partners with an old mountain man/ cowboy/They scout for General Crook until after the Battle at the Little Big Horn/One becomes a big time rancher and the other a Sheriff. This is an excellent read for the genre.....DEHS