"Skye, Barnaby (Fictitious character) Fiction." . . "Crow Indians." . . "Skye, Barnaby (Fictitious character)" . . "Western fiction." . . "Indian captivities Fiction." . . "Large type books." . . "Large print." . . "Trappers Fiction." . . "Western." . . "FICTION Westerns." . . "Indians of North America." . . "1800 - 1899" . . "Trappers." . . "Rocky Mountains" . . "Rocky Mountains." . "Crow Indians Fiction." . . . . . . "Dark Passage" . . . "Dark passage"@en . . . "In 1831 Barnaby Skye deserts the British Royal Navy, becomes a trapper in the Rocky Mountains, and takes a Crow wife, Many Quill Woman, whom he calls Victoria. But Victoria leaves him for a wealthy Crow chief and is taken captive during a raid against the Blackfeet. When Skye trails her to Canada and is himself captured by the Blackfeet, it is up to Victoria to free them both." . . "Dark Passage: A Barnaby Skye Novel"@en . . . . . . "\"It's 1831 and Barnaby Skye, a deserter from the British Royal Navy and now a seasoned trapper in the Rocky Mountains, accompanies his Crow wife, Many Quill Woman (whom he calls Victoria), to her village.\""@en . . . . "Dark passage : a Barnaby Skye novel"@en . "Dark passage : a Barnaby Skye novel" . . . . "Historical fiction" . "Historical fiction"@en . . . . . . "Electronic books"@en . "History"@en . . . . "Large type books"@en . . "Fiction" . "Western stories"@en . "Western stories" . "Fiction"@en . . . . . . "On deserting from a Royal Navy ship, sailor Barnaby Skye becomes a fur trapper in America. He marries an Indian woman, but she leaves him to become the second wife of an Indian chief. When another tribe abducts her, Skye goes to her rescue." . "On deserting from a Royal Navy ship, sailor Barnaby Skye becomes a fur trapper in America. He marries an Indian woman, but she leaves him to become the second wife of an Indian chief. When another tribe abducts her, Skye goes to her rescue."@en . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . "Many Quill Woman, the wife of Barnaby Skye, is abducted. Now Skye must come to her rescue in the Canadian wilderness, win her back from the dealiest of all mountain tribes, and win her heart again." . . . "Indians of North America Fiction." . . "Indian captivities." . . . .