Dead Man's Trail (A Piccadilly Publishing Western Book 4)
Book Details
Author(s)Chuck Tyrell
PublisherPiccadilly Publishing
ISBN / ASINB01CZW7NXW
ISBN-13978B01CZW7NX8
Sales Rank433,930
MarketplaceUnited States 🇺🇸
Description
Gunmen back-shot Jonah Stark and left him to die on the badland trail from Santa Fe to El Paso. But he lived, thanks to an old man everyone called Jesus Cristobal. Usually, no one ever saw Cristobal, but Jonah did, and owed him his life. But he’d also heard the bushwhackers say “Evans said he had gold.”
That meant Evans had set Jonah up. And now, having been given a new lease on life, Jonah Stark was going to make Evans wish he’d never been born.
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Charles T. Whipple, an international prize-winning author, uses the pen name of Chuck Tyrell for his Western novels. Whipple was born and reared in Arizona’s White Mountain country only 19 miles from Fort Apache. He won his first writing award while in high school, and has won several since, including a 4th place in the World Annual Report competition, a 2nd place in the JAXA Naoko Yamazaki Commemorative Haiku competition, the first-place Agave Award in the 2010 Oaxaca International Literature Competition, and the 2011 Global eBook Award in western fiction. Raised on a ranch, Whipple brings his own experience into play when writing about the hardy people of 19th Century Arizona. Although he currently lives in Japan, Whipple maintains close ties with the West through family, relatives, former schoolmates, and readers of his western fiction. Whipple belongs to Western Fictioneers, Western Writers of America, Arizona Authors Association, American Society of Journalists and Authors, and Tauranga Writers Inc.
That meant Evans had set Jonah up. And now, having been given a new lease on life, Jonah Stark was going to make Evans wish he’d never been born.
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Charles T. Whipple, an international prize-winning author, uses the pen name of Chuck Tyrell for his Western novels. Whipple was born and reared in Arizona’s White Mountain country only 19 miles from Fort Apache. He won his first writing award while in high school, and has won several since, including a 4th place in the World Annual Report competition, a 2nd place in the JAXA Naoko Yamazaki Commemorative Haiku competition, the first-place Agave Award in the 2010 Oaxaca International Literature Competition, and the 2011 Global eBook Award in western fiction. Raised on a ranch, Whipple brings his own experience into play when writing about the hardy people of 19th Century Arizona. Although he currently lives in Japan, Whipple maintains close ties with the West through family, relatives, former schoolmates, and readers of his western fiction. Whipple belongs to Western Fictioneers, Western Writers of America, Arizona Authors Association, American Society of Journalists and Authors, and Tauranga Writers Inc.

