Virgil Cole and Everett Hitch are back after their wild ride in Appaloosa in Robert Parker’s Blue-Eyed Devil. This time they are on the wrong side of the law. Virgil makes his own rules, yet his courage is tested when he faces a gunslinger as good—or better—than he is. Everett narrates the story with unflappable calm. This is the fourth and last book in the Virgil Cole series by the recently-deceased Robert Parker, whose prose is tight as a cinch on a bronc and reads like the movie scri

July 2010
In This Issue:
Features
Western Books & Movies
More In This Issue
- Wichita Whore War
- Crossed Sabres
- Why does Virgil Earp get so little credit as an Old West lawman?
- Are tumbleweeds not native to America?
- What did a cowboy do with his rifle when it was illegal to carry them into towns?
- Did cowboys really pull pack animals by holding a rope tied to their saddle horn?
- When did belt loops become common?
- How did the Mountain Men cook beaver tails?
- Stay on Target When Collecting Gun Shots
- Dreams of Gold on the Starvation Trail
- Calgary’s “Exotic” Stampede
- Joe McNeill
- Bandera, Texas
- The Digital Frontier
- Ethnic Fare
- The Functional Side of Cowboy Boots
- What’s in His Head?
- The Best BBQ Joints in Texas