Before you leave...
Take 20% off your first order
20% off
Enter the code below at checkout to get 20% off your first order
Discover summer reading lists for all ages & interests!
Find Your Next Read

Ross became a marshal. He was good with a gun, maybe the best in the whole Territory. He proved his mettle the day Rafe Callahan, an ex-Quantrill raider, brought his band of outlaws into the little quiet town of Kilby, Arizona one morning to rob the bank. They were a casual bunch, all trained killers, ex-soldiers, unafraid of anyone, and supremely confident. Their arrogance allowed them to believe they could ride into town in broad daylight, rob the bank, and ride out without anyone capable of opposing them.
John Ross, with some help from certain townsmen, had stopped the outlaws. At his trial, Callahan vowed vengeance.
Ross falls in love with Molly, a local church-going woman, and Ross, wanting to keep her in his life, agreed to go to church. Ross quits his job as marshal and hangs up his guns. He also makes a promise to the woman he's going to marry, and to God, that he'll never kill another man, ever. He proposes to Molly and begins working on a small ranch he'd bought a year earlier.
Then, Rafe Callahan escaped from Yuma Prison.
When he's warned that Callahan is loose and hunting him, he has to make a choice: break his vow to God and the woman he loves, or run. Everything in him screams to fight. All his life has been spent fighting, and if there is one thing John Ross is good at, it is fighting. His prowess with a gun was already legend in Arizona.But, he relents, determined to keep his vow. Ross heads off into the mountains, determined to hide out until Callahan is captured. But, deep down, he knows it is unlikely because Callahan, who is an expert tracker, will probably find him.
He also comes to realize that he simply cannot keep his promise, because to keep that promise is to die.
Even the woman he loves comes to realize that, acknowledging to herself that she is actually glad that the man she so deeply loves, is so very good at killing.
This story is one about a man who finds himself struggling a promise made. To keep a promise he'd made to the woman he loved meant he could not defend himself. He'd agreed to hang up his guns and that his days of killing other men were over.
Louis L'Amour once said that writing a good novel meant "telling a good story." If the story-line is bad, the book will not be worth reading.
You'll find that this is a "good story" and once you'll enjoy.
The author likes to believe even Louis would enjoy this one.
He began writing westerns for a California publication, Far West, in the 70's, then quit writing for years while he developed his legal career.
Currently, he maintains a private practice in NW Indiana, where he works as a contract attorney for the Prosecutor's Office and does other legal matters.
But writing is his real love.
Glover grew up in Arizona and has actually visited the places he writes about. He says his biggest influence as a writer of westerns was Louis L'Amour, the man he calls "The Dean of Western Fiction." Glover says of L'Amour: "There isn't a writer out there who does what he does with a character."
Glover has several western fiction books on his website http: //westernfiction.com
Thanks for subscribing!
This email has been registered!
Take 20% off your first order
Enter the code below at checkout to get 20% off your first order