
A kill-crazy soldier of fortune named Cleve Buckner was recruiting an army of murderers, gunmen and deserters from all over Central America. With foreign money behind him, Buckner's job was to wreck the Panama Canal before it could be completed. Farg...
This is the second volume in John Benteen's outstanding series about soldier of fortune Neal Fargo. It opens in Hollywood in 1914, where Fargo is working temporarily as an actor, of all things, playing a villain in a silent Western movie directed by ...
ABOUT THE AUTHOR Benjamin Leopold Haas was born in Charlotte, North Carolina, in 1926. His imagination was inspired by the stories of the Civil War and Reconstruction as told by his Grandmother, who had lived through both. Ben's father was also a p...
The East Texas oilfields came in with a boom. Rivers of money gushed from the ground. Along with the money came the speculators, the wheelers and dealers -- and the killers. Fargo followed the money and excitement clear across Texas. Trouble is Far...
Fargo, Neal Fargo - a true man of action. The Mexicans needed guns and Fargo needed money -- so they made a deal. Getting the arms past the cavalry patrols along the border would take some doing, but Neal Fargo thought he could handle it. There might...
The brainchild of Amazon Kindle Number One bestselling western writers Mike Stotter and Ben Bridges, PICCADILLY PUBLISHING is dedicated to reissuing classic fiction from Yesterday and Today! WOLF'S HEAD Fargo knew Lasher was behind attempts to wreck ...
The brainchild of Amazon Kindle Number One bestselling western writers Mike Stotter and Ben Bridges, PICCADILLY PUBLISHING is dedicated to reissuing classic fiction from Yesterday and Today! VALLEY OF SKULLS Fargo was after two things: a priceless...
The Canfield clan, thirty strong, had left their North Carolina mountains and were raising hell in Texas. One of them had shot a Texas Ranger, and the Rangers had to bring in the killer.The last thing they wanted, though, was to start a feud where th...
Fargo went to Argentina for two reasons. The first was money -- $20,000 -- because he never sells his gun without getting paid in advance. Professional interest was the second reason; in his time, Fargo had picked up the tricks of his deadly trad...
Some folks swore that glory-seeking Pat Garrett never did gun down Billy the Kid in that darkened adobe house in New Mexico. Fargo never thought about it one way or the other, until a man with foxy eyes backed his argument with $25,000. For that kind...
Fargo staked an old prospector to five thousand and figured to make a million in gold on the deal. It made him killing mad when a bunch of gun slicks killed the old man, stole the gold and took his daughter along to while away the weary hours on the ...
The Colorado was the wildest, toughest river in America. Just staying alive on the rapids took a lot of nerve and a lot of luck. And then the men -- TR called them wolves -- oldtime gunfighters and desperados who hid out in the riverbank wilderness. ...
Fargo was making good money running guns across the border to Pancho Villa. He didn't give a damn about the Mexican Revolution, as long as the money was good. Then a dangerous Mexican-Irishman named Carlos O'Brien and a good-looking El Paso saloon gi...
Fargo knew Lasher was behind attempts to wreck the MacKenzie logging operation. Lasher wanted the timberland for himself, and smashing MacKenzie was the first step. Fargo's old Rough Riders boss had an interest in the situation and wanted Lasher stop...
DANGER WAS HIS BUSINESS He was a big man, with wide shoulders, narrow hips the long legs of a born and bred horseman. His hair was close-cropped and snow white, though he was only in his thirties. He had grown up hard and never looked back. He'd p...
FARGO'S ARSENAL: The English Webley & Scott Navy Automatic shoots a .455 bullet that is inherently unstable. The bullet is apt to tumble in flight and keyhole on impact. You can hit a man in the navel with it and have the slug come out the back of h...
FARGO'S ARSENAL: The Cold Double Action Model in .41 Long ' Colt caliber was the favored gun of Billy the Kid and of gentleman gambler Luke Short. Throwing a super heavy 200 grain slug, the factory load is a better man stopper than the .38 special. ...
Fargo was running Springfield rifles across the border to Pancho Villa. That meant he had to dodge the U.S. Army, the Texas Rangers, and the Mexican regulars. But for the kind of money he was getting, it was worth it. Then he got mixed up with two Am...
A rogue ranger and a crooked lawyer were using loopholes in the law to buy up ancient Spanish land grants and to throw hundreds of people off their land. But they wanted to grab the de Cordoba's land most of all because there was oil on it. Through a...
BADLANDERS Fargo went up to the Dakotas to buy horses for the Army. This was 1918, but the country out there was still nearly as wild as in the old days. Holed up in the Badlands, the closest thing to hell on earth, were the meanest bunch of deser...
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