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Garters and Spurs

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Garters And Spurs by Deloras Scott released on May 25, 1993 is available now for purchase.

248 pages, Paperback

First published June 1, 1993

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DeLoras Scott

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4,032 reviews22 followers
June 14, 2019
From her hiding place, Sara Carter watched as her mother and sister were raped and murdered. Even at 14, Sara had the presence of mind to save her other sister from death (but not from rape) by shooting at the marauders.

At the end of the day, however, Sara and Megan were the only ones left alive to bury their parents and 3 siblings. Sara promises that she will one day get revenge on the man who escaped, Dodd Elliot.

Texan Tom Tanner sends his son on a mission; Fargo Tanner is to find his brother’s killer and punish him with death. Following a very cold trail, Fargo goes to the Arizona Territory, looking for a huge dog and a rider on a paint horse.

Fargo meets Sara, who just happens to have a Great Dane with the correct markings. He decides that she will have the answers he seeks. However, neither Sara nor her neighbors will talk about the man Fargo is looking for - named Hawk.

Chiricahua Apache Indians visit Megan and Sara and refer to them as ‘Indian princesses.’ The reader finds out why the Carters were attacked 6 years before. If you have done any genealogy, you know there were no such things in the North American Original People’s history. To use such a phrase showed that the author did not do her research.

These Apache have captured Fargo Tanner – more dead than alive. Sara demands that Tanner be released to her and she promises that if he lives, he will come to fight his captor, Ocha. The story is eventful; there are surprises, twists and interesting characters.

However, the story starts down a trail, stops, drops that thread and starts down another path (Tom Tanner’s relationship with his two sons is an early example. The fact that Charles Carter (Sara’s father) is a ‘half-breed’ is another dangling string.) Then, oddities are added to the mix; Rose, one of Sara’s friends, is captured by an outlaw. Why?

I thought this story had lots of potential that sometimes got lost. It was a very uneven book.
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