
From the PublisherA collection of short frontier stories personally selected and introduced by the author.From the Inside FlapA collection of short frontier stories personally selected and introduced by the author.About the AuthorOur foremost storyteller of the authentic West, Louis LAmour has thrilled a nation by chronicling the adventures of the brave men and women who settled the American frontier. There are more than 300 million copies of his books in print around the world. where can i read fiction books online for free Dutchman's Flat
1 of 4 people found the following review helpful. Not A Dramatized VersionBy CustomerDespite this not being dramatized Cat Parker does a good job of characterization, making it easy to keep the characters straight. The audio is crisp and clear and easily understood in a car environment. The stories are entertaining. Unlike the reviews above the stories printed above this is what I found (from the back cover):Dutchman's Flat - Six angry men chase the winner of a brutal gun-fight. In the frustrating, insulting and dangerous days that follow, each learns the startling truth about the man they're goint to lynch.His Brother's Debt - Cassidy can draw faster than a snake can strike. So why is he afraid to leave the back country? Because he has to avoid his demons - if they'll let him.I found both stories to be great, but it would have been nice to at least add some special effects. Well worth the purchase price. One cassette. Run time: 1 hour.1 of 1 people found the following review helpful. wonderful collectionBy Wayne HastingsThis collection of L'Amour short stories is one of his best. It's not only well written, it features several characters that later became main characters in full-length novels. One other extra makes this collection wonderfulevery short story has a short introduction written by L'Amour. They each personalize the stories and give the reader the feeling that Louis is right there telling us the story.0 of 0 people found the following review helpful. Five StarsBy R. CaveI have never read a bad Louis Lamour book.