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http://worldcat.org/entity/work/id/4730502

Range of golden hooves

"'Wherever the sheep sets his hoof, there is gold to be found.' What this Spanish proverb conveniently leaves off is: Where gold is found, trouble follows. Dan Shea came to New Mexico Territory looking to achieve the American dream. When he meets a wealthy rancher with a beautiful daughter, Dan thinks he has it made. But in the land of the lawless West, you only own what you can hold on to, and there are plenty of others looking to wrest away the ranch Dan has built his future on. It starts with a holdup. Then escalates to murder. And soon Dan is wondering whether he'll have any future left at all"--Publisher's web site.

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http://schema.org/description

  • ""'Wherever the sheep sets his hoof, there is gold to be found.' What this Spanish proverb conveniently leaves off is: Where gold is found, trouble follows. Dan Shea came to New Mexico Territory looking to achieve the American dream. When he meets a wealthy rancher with a beautiful daughter, Dan thinks he has it made. But in the land of the lawless West, you only own what you can hold on to, and there are plenty of others looking to wrest away the ranch Dan has built his future on. It starts with a holdup. Then escalates to murder. And soon Dan is wondering whether he'll have any future left at all"--Publisher's web site."@en
  • ""'Wherever the sheep sets his hoof, there is gold to be found.' What this Spanish proverb conveniently leaves off is: Where gold is found, trouble follows. Dan Shea came to New Mexico Territory looking to achieve the American dream. When he meets a wealthy rancher with a beautiful daughter, Dan thinks he has it made. But in the land of the lawless West, you only own what you can hold on to, and there are plenty of others looking to wrest away the ranch Dan has built his future on. It starts with a holdup. Then escalates to murder. And soon Dan is wondering whether he'll have any future left at all"--Publisher's web site."
  • ""'Wherever the sheep sets his hoof, there is gold to be found.' What this Spanish proverb conveniently leaves off is: Where gold is found, trouble follows. Dan Shea came to New Mexico Territory looking to achieve the American dream. When he meets a wealthy rancher with a beautiful daughter, Dan thinks he has it made. But in the land of the lawless West, you only own what you can hold on to, and there are plenty of others looking to wrest away the ranch Dan has built his future on. It starts with a holdup. Then escalates to murder. And soon Dan is wondering whether he'll have any future left at all" --from publisher's web site."
  • ""Dan Shea came to New Mexico Territory looking to achieve the American dream. When he meets a wealthy rancher with a beautiful daughter, Dan thinks he has it made. But in the land of the lawless west, you only own what you can hold on to, and there are plenty of others looking to wrest away the ranch dan has built his future on. It starts with a holdup. Then escalates to murder. And soon Dan is wondering whether he'll have any future left at all." -- Back cover."
  • "Novels from the golden age of western fiction can either be great, or terrible. John Trace writes a good novel that examines exactly what it takes to carve out a living in a hostile land. Good range, gold, and water often attract the worst in most settlers. In the case of Dan Shea, gold is his fall, and a hold up, and soon a murder turns his struggle desperate. Written in 1941, Trace's style is more contemporary and holds up well."@en

http://schema.org/genre

  • "Electronic books"
  • "Western stories"
  • "Western stories"@en
  • "Fiction"
  • "Fiction"@en

http://schema.org/name

  • "Range of golden hooves"@en
  • "Range of Holden Hoofs"
  • "Range of Golden Hoofs"
  • "Range of holden[sic] hoofs"@en
  • "Range of golden hoofs"
  • "Range of golden hoofs"@en