
A band of Apache bucks - led by a charismatic hothead - has forsaken reservation life to go on a bloody rampage. In pursuit with Lieutenant Michael Covington's detail is civilian scout Jackson Farraday. But a showdown looms between the pair when Jack...
While Silver Vein's cheering citizens watch Misfit Lil confirm her reputation as 'Princess of Pistoleers' in a gala shooting match, Yuma Nat Hawkins and his gang rob the bank in the near-empty town, gunning down the feeble opposition in cold blood. S...
Misfit Lil wasn't about to let the rustlers run off a bunch of her pa's improved Flying G cattle. She started a stampede that trampled them bloodily into the dust. But that was only the prelude to the affair....
Washington desk soldiers view a reign of terror by a band of renegade Apaches as a mockery of the Army. They give orders for elimination of the delinquent bucks and send strutting Lieutenant-General George Hamilton Morgan to make sure they're carried...
A senseless killing stopped Jackson Farraday - scout, guide, man of the West - from investigating an odd situation in the raw mining settlement called Black Dog. For answers, he tricked Lilian Goodnight into spying at the High Meadows cattle ranch....
Misfit Lil (real name Lilian Goodnight) is a wild, tomboyish young woman raised on a ranch in the American West. She's an expert marksman ("Princess of Pistoleers"), rides astride in buckskins rather than side-saddle in dresses, and refuses to conform to traditional expectations of women in the late 19th-century frontier. Each book places her in a new adventure: intervening in rustling, wagon-train troubles, murders, frame-ups, or personal vendettas, often with guns blazing, quick wits, and fearless action. She frequently rides to the rescue of friends, innocents, or the underdog, while facing down outlaws, corrupt officials, assassins, or hostile forces. The plots are classic pulp Western: fast-moving action, shootouts, chases, and moral justice delivered at the barrel of a gun.
> Misfit Lil (Lilian Goodnight) — The irrepressible protagonist; a young, independent rancher's daughter who dresses and rides like a man, shoots better than most men, and lives by her own code. Fearless, quick-tempered, skilled with guns and horses; often intervenes in trouble without hesitation.
> Supporting/recurring: Ranchers, friends (e.g., horse rancher Sundown Sanders in some books), soldiers at nearby forts, sheriffs, outlaws, and villains (rustlers, assassins, corrupt figures) who change per book.
The American Old West (late 19th century), primarily in the Arizona Territory or similar frontier regions. The atmosphere is rugged and dangerous: dusty trails, saloons, rustlers, renegades, and the harsh realities of frontier life.
Straightforward, action-packed, and unapologetically pulpy—classic Black Horse Western style with fast pacing, vivid gunplay, and a tough, no-nonsense heroine. It's exciting and entertaining, with bursts of violence (shootings, rustling, ambushes) and a clear good-vs-evil morality. The tone is heroic and empowering for Lil, with dry humor in her defiance of norms and a sense of frontier justice—more gritty and straightforward than introspective or romantic.
The series is a fun, fast-read entry in the Black Horse Western line—ideal for fans of traditional oaters with a strong, unconventional female lead who defies gender norms while delivering justice. It's appreciated in western pulp circles for its lively action and memorable heroine.
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