The Funeral of Doc Holliday (A Gunsmith Western Book 415)
Book Details
Author(s)J. R. Roberts
PublisherPiccadilly Publishing
ISBN / ASINB01H073TD0
ISBN-13978B01H073TD3
MarketplaceFrance 🇫🇷
Description
The death of the legendary Doc Holliday brought Clint Adams to an impromptu wake following the funeral in Colton, California. The mourners in attendance would have made any outlaw shake in their boots: Wyatt Earp, Virgil Earp, Bat Masterson, Luke Short, “Turkey Creek” Jack Johnson and Sherman McMaster. After the funeral everyone left town, but Clint stayed to help Virgil—who was the Marshal of Colton—with a problem involving a group of cowboys. When Clint asked if there was going to be another O.K. Corral, Virgil said no, and assured him that the two of them could handle it.
He shouldn’t have said that, because he didn’t know what kind of trouble was heading their way. If the The Gunsmith and the lawman didn’t resolve matters, they weren’t going to have much of a future ...
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
J.R. Roberts is otherwise known as Robert J. Randisi, an American author who writes in the detective and Western genres. He has authored more than 500 published books and has edited more than 30 anthologies of short stories. Booklist magazine said he "may be the last of the pulp writers." He co-founded and edited Mystery Scene magazine and co-founded the American Crime Writers League. He founded The Private Eye Writers of America in 1981, where he created the Shamus Award. To date he has written almost 400 books in The Gunsmith series alone.
He shouldn’t have said that, because he didn’t know what kind of trouble was heading their way. If the The Gunsmith and the lawman didn’t resolve matters, they weren’t going to have much of a future ...
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
J.R. Roberts is otherwise known as Robert J. Randisi, an American author who writes in the detective and Western genres. He has authored more than 500 published books and has edited more than 30 anthologies of short stories. Booklist magazine said he "may be the last of the pulp writers." He co-founded and edited Mystery Scene magazine and co-founded the American Crime Writers League. He founded The Private Eye Writers of America in 1981, where he created the Shamus Award. To date he has written almost 400 books in The Gunsmith series alone.










