Spur McCoy rides into Abilene, Kansas--a town burning for revenge. Spur decides to find out who's responsible for rustling herds of cattle and murdering the cowhands, but too many questions lead him to a cathouse beauty who provides him with few leads, but lots of love. Reissue.
The big mistake of my life stems from the drug culture that I was caught up in as part of my counterculture lifestyle. We all experimented with drugs, but I took it a bit farther by selling a bit on the side. One thing led to another, and the next thing you know, it became a full-time job. It got out of hand, and the next thing I knew I got busted. It was a horror show for the family, and I ended up being sentenced to sixty-three months at Allenwood Federal Prison Camp in Allenwood, Pennsylvania. All of the time I was locked up with plenty of time on my hands. I wrote letters chronicling everything. Two real good friends of mine and myself wrote weekly over the four or so years that I was away. Well, it turns out that both of my friends saved all of the letters that I wrote to them and when I got home they each handed me a bag full of my mail from jail. This book is a compilation of my experiences in jail. Some names have been changed to protect the innocent. Enjoy!
In "Wyoming Wench," Spur is surprised by a buxom blonde with a sharp knife when he goes to investigate a corrupt sheriff. "Portland Pussycat" is a brown-haired beauty named Clare who helps Spur round up a murderous counterfeiter. Original.
Nebraska Nymph--Spur McCoy's mission was to help the gutless sheriff prevent violence from erupting between the ranchers and the sodbusters. But by the time McCoy rode into town, the killing had already begun. And Mountain Madam--Spur vowed to stop a plot by renegade fanatics who were executing anyone who stood in the way of a fiendish conspiracy.