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Oliver Strange – Sudden Takes the Trail (1940)

We sell this book as an eBook.

Please do not read this book if you are likely to become offended with the norms of 80 years ago.

The sixth Sudden book chronologically in the series.

HE HAD KILLED HIS BEST FRIEND …  That it was an accident, didn’t matter.  Neither did the howling mob who aimed to string him up for his mistake. What mattered was that he, Jim Green, had killed his friend.

He had to move on and just hope that one day he’d be able to live with himself.  And never use those guns again on any man.  That was his decision, and he lived by it …

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Preface

Please do not read this book if you are likely to become offended with the norms of 80 years ago.

This is the sixth Sudden book chronologically in the series.

HE HAD KILLED HIS BEST FRIEND …

That it was an accident, didn’t matter.  Neither did the howling mob who aimed to string him up for his mistake. What mattered was that he, Jim Green, had killed his friend.

He had to move on and just hope that one day he’d be able to live with himself. And never use those guns again on any man.  That was his decision, and he lived by it …

Until the time came when he had to use them, and use them sudden!

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Along the far reaches of the Chisholm Trail, from deadly Kansas, along hidden outlaw trails, the tall, mysterious man named James Green stopped to ask the same questions, then moved on. A legacy of hatred left to him by a dying man had sent him in search of two men … and a final, deadly reckoning.

As he rode, he earned a nickname that was whispered whenever men talked about gunfighters, and whenever violence ran rampant in dusty streets. They called him Sudden, and his bitter quest was relentless.

********

The Sudden series is an excellent series and well worth reading, again and again over the years, as I have.  Although Oliver Strange is an excellent writer, the Sudden Series is often politically incorrect for our current era, including the fact that Sudden rides a black horse he calls N****r.  This is clearly not meant to be any kind of specific slight directed towards black people however, it is definitely disconcerting when it pops up.  This book (and the series) promotes the strong and honourable characteristics often associated with the west.  There is a lot in the characters to admire, including persons of colour, Mexican’s and native Indians.

Apart from the ten books in this series written by Oliver Strange, Frederick H. Christian also wrote five books after Oliver Strange died.  Although worth reading, please be aware that a number of the Frederick H. Christian books appear to be almost copies of some of Oliver Strange Sudden books.  This is a shame as Frederick H. Christian is the non-de-plume of Fred Nolan who authored some excellent books.

 

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