Riders of the Purple Sage
Spiral-Bound | August 1, 2010
Zane Grey
★★★☆☆+
from 10,001 to 50,000 ratings
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Riders of the Purple Sage
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Over 40 Million Copies Of Zane Grey's Novels Sold
The premier chronicler of the American West, legendary storyteller Zane Grey has captivated millions of readers with his timeless adventures of life, death, gunfire, and justice. This is the Old West in all its glory and grandeur. Forged in blood. Enflamed by passion. Emblazoned with bullets. . .
Riders Of The Purple Sage
Cottonwoods, Utah. 1871. A woman stands accused. A man, sentenced to whipping. Into this travesty of small-town justice rides the one man the town elders fear. His name is Lassiter, a notorious gunman who's come to avenge his sister's death. It doesn't take Lassiter long to see that this once-peaceful Mormon community is controlled by the corrupt Deacon Tull--a powerful elder who's trying to take the woman's land by forcing her to marry him, branding her foreman as a dangerous "outsider." Lassiter vows to help them. But when the ranch is attacked by horse thieves, cattle rustlers, and a mysterious Masked Rider, he realizes they're up against something bigger, and more brutal, than the land itself. . .
In this battle, no man rides alone.
"Zane Grey epitomized the mythical West that should have been. . . the standout among them is Riders of the Purple Sage." --True West
"Grey was a champion of the American wilderness and the men and women who tamed the Old West." --Booklist
Publisher: Kensington Publishing Corp.
Original Binding: Mass Market
Pages: 304 pages
ISBN-10: 0786022620
Item Weight: 0.4 lbs
Dimensions: 4.1 x 0.9 x 6.7 inches
Customer Reviews: 3 out of 5 stars 10,001 to 50,000 ratings
Zane Grey is noted for his careful research and accurate portrayal of the American West. Grey’s first book was published in 1904, and he went on to write more than 50 novels, most of them tales of adventure with a Western setting, including The Last of the Plainsmen (1908), Riders of the Purple Sage (1912), The Thundering Herd (1925), Code of the West (1934), and West of the Pecos (1937). His nonfiction works includeTales of Fishing (1925). Many of Grey's novels continue to be extremely popular, and several have been adapted into motion pictures.
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