Fighting Caravans

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Center Point, 2002 - Fiction - 328 pages
Young frontiersman Clint Belmont is a scout for a caravan heading west. Belmont's job is to protect twenty-eight wagons packed with families, supplies, and tough-as-nails Texans. In order to disguise himself, he convinces a fellow traveler to pose as his wife, and while Belmont tries to save the caravan from shifty traders and marauding Indians, his two crusty companions try to save him from falling in love.

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About the author (2002)

Zane Grey was born Pearl Zane Gray in 1872, in Zanesville, Ohio. He studied dentistry at the University of Pennsylvania, married Lina Elise Roth in 1905, then moved his family west where he began to write novels. The author of 86 books, he is today considered the father of the Western genre, with its heady romances and mysterious outlaws. Riders of the Purple Sage (1912) brought Grey his greatest popular acclaim. Other notable titles include The Light of Western Stars (1914) and The Vanishing American (1925). An extremely prolific writer, he often completed three novels a year, while his publisher would issue only one at a time. Twenty-five of his novels were published posthumously. His last, The Reef Girl, was published in 1977. Zane Grey died of heart failure on October 23 in Altadena, California, in 1939.

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