Frontier Overland Company by Willam
W. Johnstone and J.A. Johnstone
Summary:
From the bestselling masters of Old West fiction comes a bold
new saga of the American frontier.
Set amid the sprawling plains and majestic mountains of Wyoming Territory, this
is the epic story of a legendary stagecoach line—and the brave men who built
it, drove it, and risked their lives to keep it running . . .
Founded in 1866, The Frontier Overland Company was
no ordinary stagecoach operation. To begin with, its founding partners met in a
Wyoming saloon brawl. After a raucous burst of punching, cursing, and chair
smashing, the last two men standing become friends for life. Two kindred souls
with the same fighting spirit, Tucker Cobb and former Texas Ranger Butch
Keeling agreed to launch a business together: a brand-new stagecoach line
through the wilds of Wyoming . . .
They called it the Frontier Overland Company. And
a legend was born.
Cobb and Keeling knew it wouldn’t be easy. The
nation was still healing from the War Between the States. Red Cloud’s War—an
armed alliance of Lakota, Northern Cheyennes, and Northern Apaho against the
United States—was heating up fast. And wealthy railroad magnates were itching
to lay track for their western expansion to the Pacific. But it was one
ruthless businessman—King Charles Hagen—who posed the biggest danger of all. He
saw Cobb and Keeling’s fledging company as a direct threat to his growing shipping
empire. And, unfortunately for them, he decided to squash their little
stagecoach business while they’re escorting a young woman to see her dying
father, an army colonel, at a Wyoming fort. To make things worse, Red Cloud’s
on the warpath—making Wyoming Territory is about to become hell on earth.
This is the thrilling story of The Frontier
Overland Company. This is how dreams are made. How legends are born. And how
two fearless men staked their claim in America. The rest is history.
Review: 3-STAR
I wish I could
have given this story a better rating, but sadly I could not. This story is
riddled with poor editing. There is trouble
with the timeline of events, missing words or use of the wrong word as well as mix-up
in names. If these errors were not present, I surely would have given it a 5
star, as the storyline is wonderfully written, and the characters are well-developed
and life-like. I halfway expect poor
editing from people who self-publish, but not from a publishing company that’s
been around since the 70’s. It starts out with little errors and as the story progresses
they come closer together, like the end of the story was rushed through the editing
process.
I received
this book for free from NetGalley for my honest review
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