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Laura Pritchett’s first novel, Sky Bridge, perfectly
captures the speech and rhythms of everyday life in the
hardscrabble ranchland of the eastern Colorado plains
by Malcolm McCollum,
Nov 14, 2005
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In Buffalo Calf Road Woman, Rosemary
and Joseph Agonito give a fictionalized account of the only woman
warrior to fight at the Battle of the Little Bighorn
by Staff,
Nov 28, 2005
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Andrew Wingfield’s tensely told novel, Hear
Him Roar, describes what happens when Puma concolor, the
mountain lion, collides with Homo dingus dongus, the suburban
homeowner
by Staff,
Nov 28, 2005
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In his second novel, So Brave, So Young, So Handsome, Leif Enger takes the reader on a journey across the American West, circa 1915.
by Janice Gable Bashman ,
Sep 01, 2008
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In Frank Bergon's new novel, a young man in California's Central Valley is haunted by the memory of his best friend, whom he murdered.
by Tara Rae Miner,
Oct 30, 2011
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In his new novel, Work Song, Ivan Doig describes the struggle between mine owners and union activists in post-WWI Butte, Mont.
by Kathleen Yale,
Oct 10, 2010
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In his novel, Blind Your Ponies, Stanley Gordon West looks into the heart of a fictional small town in Montana.
by Karen Rigby,
Feb 06, 2011
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Manuel Muñoz creates a dark mystery inspired by the filming of Alfred Hitchcock's legendary thriller Psycho.
by Chérie Newman,
Sep 04, 2011
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Deirdre McNamer’s new novel, Red Rover, beautifully
captures the unromantic realism of Montana’s small
towns.
by Bruce Barcott,
Oct 29, 2007
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Sarah Bird’s well-written novel The Flamenco Academy
weaves the history of this dramatic dance form into a obsessed
young woman’s search for identity.
by Margaret Foley,
Nov 12, 2007