Please don't delete. This is an alternate cover for ISBN 0312951698.
Gold fever had hit California, and suddenly, the land was full of hungry pioneers. For Gil and Van Austin, two Texas brothers, it meant the chance to sell well-grazed longhorns after years of hard ranching and a treacherous cattle drive up through Mexico. The only trouble was that California was on the other side of a searing desert, swollen rivers, a barrage of Indian attacks, and a whole passel of outlaw trouble. And while the Texans and their men were ready and willing to take it all on, there was one thing they weren't prepared for: the ultimate act of treachery and deceit in a land of schemers, dreamers and gold!
Ralph Compton (April 11, 1934—September 16, 1998) was an American writer of western fiction.
A native of St. Clair County, Alabama, Compton began his writing career with a notable work, The Goodnight Trail, which was chosen as a finalist for the Western Writers of America "Medicine Pipe Bearer Award" bestowed upon the "Best Debut Novel". He was also the author of the Sundown Rider series and the Border Empire series. In the last decade of his life, he authored more than two dozen novels, some of which made it onto the USA Today bestseller list for fiction.
Ralph Compton died in Nashville, Tennessee at the age of 64. Since his passing, Signet Books has continued the author's legacy, releasing new novels, written by authors such as Joseph A. West and David Robbins, under Compton's byline.
I read this as an audio book. The reader was fantastic. The story line mediocre. This is not the best western I’ve read but love hearing a western. This book is your typical western, nothing new to see here but also nothing bad here to read.
Another very good trail book. A lot of detail and again, I enjoyed the Prologue. Intriguing Western tale. The dangers encountered during a cattle drive from Texas to California.
(c)1994 Full of action, and danger. It is a time of gold fever, and brothers face many dangers during a cattle drive. Certainly a must read for western book lovers