Pepper Paige is tired of her life as a dance-hall girl, and tired of fearing Jordan Beckett, a violent patron who has turned his attentions on her. When a stagecoach wrecks and an injured woman dies in her room, Pepper assumes her identity and leaves town. The dead woman was a refined, educated Christian on her way to marry a rancher she knew only through letters. Pepper chooses to assume that role. What she doesn't know is, the rancher has been killed by Indians and Tap Andrews is now passing himself off as the rancher. What will happen when the two meet?
Stephen Bly (August 17, 1944 - June 9, 2011) authored 100 books and hundreds of articles. His book, THE LONG TRAIL HOME, (Broadman & Holman), won the prestigious 2002 CHRISTY AWARD for excellence in Christian fiction in the category western novel. Three other books, PICTURE ROCK (Crossway Books), THE OUTLAW'S TWIN SISTER (Crossway Books), and LAST OF THE TEXAS CAMP (Broadman & Holman), were Christy Award finalists. He spoke at colleges, churches, camps and conferences across the U.S. and Canada. He was the pastor of Winchester Community Church, and served as mayor of Winchester, Idaho (2000-2007). He spoke on numerous television and radio programs, including Dr. James Dobson's Focus on the Family. He was an Active Member of the Western Writers of America. Steve graduated summa cum laude in Philosophy from Fresno State University and received a M.Div from Fuller Theological Seminary. The Blys have three sons: Russell (married to Lois) and father of Zachary and Miranda (married to Chris Ross) and mother of Alayah, Michael (married to Michelle), and Aaron (married to Rina Joye) and father of Keaton and Deckard. A third generation westerner, Steve spent his early years working on ranches and farms.
2.5 stars This is the first book in the Code of the West series. I actually read Book 2 before I read this so I knew how some things turned out already. I can’t say this is a favorite. Both Tap and Pepper decide to lie about who they are in order to escape from the life they had known. Only neither one knows the other is lying at first. They do come clean before the end of the book. Plenty of bad guys and shootings. Pepper works as a dance hall girl at first, and so we spend time there and with some of those girls. Neither one is a Christian at the beginning of the book. I don’t know, this just isn’t a book I’d necessarily want to read again, though I do want to at least read another book to see how things turn out. It’s clean. Some kisses, but only mentions of them not describing them. Injuries and killings but nothing descriptive. Even the part with the saloon and dance hall girls if pretty clean. Not much Christianity until the very end.
Mistaken identity at its finest! Stephen Bly is a MASTER storyteller. Tap and Pepper intrigue you from their first moments on the page. There’s humor, there’s heart, there’s redemption- everything I’ve come to expect from Bly. 5 stars ⭐️
Romance: Two characters steal a couple’s identity, and the other doesn’t know. They commit to an engagement for a better life, and there are multiple scenes of them kissing on-page. There are mentions of dance hall girls and the presumed relationships they have with various men. Mentions of an unknown affair. The main character also kisses one of the dancehall girls, though he swears it’s because it felt bad for her. Violence & Gore: There are several gunfights, fistfights, threats of shootings, stabbings, and more. It’s the wild, wild west. A character is framed for the murder of a man whose wife he slept with (though it’s not on-page). Profanity: None that I remember Substance Use: There is a bit of drinking at the dance halls. Frightening/Triggering Scenes: All the fights are very descriptive and typically end in the death of a person or animal, all of which are on-page and detailed. Some girls were abused, kidnapped, held hostage, or even killed for various reasons.
Thought it would be funny to read, and it definitely is. Very old-school/western romance where the guys can kind of say whatever they want and get away with it. The girls suffer through horrible fates and are overly dramatic for no real reason. If half the energy that went into describing the type of guns the MMC had and the damage they could do went into the actual story and relationship, this could have been a whole lot better. The religious aspect is okay, but there really isn’t a lot to go off of, though I’m assuming there will be more of it seen throughout the series. No different than the westerns your grandpa forces you to watch.
The title comes from the lyrics to the traditional cowboy ballad “Get along little doggies”. This is the first Stephen Bly book I have read. Zachariah Hatcher and Suzanne Cedar are engaged to be married, but they have never met in person. Suzanne travels to Colorado to marry Hatcher only both die on their way to the meeting site. Tap Andrews who was with Hatcher when he died agreed to go on and met Cedar’s stagecoach and tell Cedar of his death so she would not be left alone in a strange country. Only there is a stagecoach accident and Cedar is killed. Pepper a dance hall girl took care of Cedar as she died then takes her place to meet Hatcher. The book has lots of suspense with outlaws, and wondering if they will tell each other the truth about themselves. I believe this is one of the so called Christian fiction books. It is a typical western with a bit of a twist to the plot and a moral point to the story. Sometimes it’s hilarious, sometimes poignant but always entertaining. It is a short easy read that makes a good break from more complicated books. I read this as an audio book downloaded from Audible. Jerry Sciarrio did a good job narrating the book.
Zachariah Hatcher dies in an Indian attack, but not before his deathbed ramblings give gunman and drifter Tap Andrews the keys to assuming a new identity.
Pepper Paige is a dance hall girl sick of her life. A stage coach accident delivers Suzanne Cedar into Pepper's care. Pepper discovers Suzanne was on her way to meet her fiance, Hatcher, whom she had never seen before. When Suzanne dies, Pepper decides to take this escape route and become Miss Cedar herself.
They're both pretending and scared to death the other will find out. This is a hilarious western about fresh starts and God's forgiveness and grace.
Read this Christian Western for a readers' advisory group. Someone in the group said Bly's books often had witty banter among the characters. A woman travels west to marry a man she's only corresponded with. In separate incidents they die before they meet. Strangers take over their identities and hope to marry and change their lives. The deceased were Christians; their replacements are not (a gunman and a dancehall girl), though they are determined to live Christian lives from now on.
Stephen Bly's books are always fantastic. I listened to this one on cassette as I walked on the tread mill. I have been a fan of Mr. Bly's for many years, but never got to read this series. I love Tap and Pepper. They both had horrible lives but decided they wanted to change and make life the way it should be. Love this story. Highly recommended
Wholesome story of a gunslinger who is ready to turn his life around who meets a girl with the same goal. Old West setting and shootouts combined with a bit of humor, romance and faith.
Very good. It's a light-hearted, simple western story but told superbly. I recommend this short novel to anyone. The next five in the series are on my to-read list.