Prolific Western writer Bertha Muzzy Bower penned dozens of novels detailing the difficulty and unique beauty of ranch life in the late 1800s and early 1900s. The Quirt centers on a struggling ranch of the same name and the travails and triumphs of...
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Prolific Western writer Bertha Muzzy Bower penned dozens of novels detailing the difficulty and unique beauty of ranch life in the late 1800s and early 1900s. The Quirt centers on a struggling ranch of the same name and the travails and triumphs of the extended family that fights to keep it afloat
THE QUIRT; Contents; Chapter One - Little Fish; Chapter Two - The Enchantment of Long Distance; Chapter Three - Reality is Weighed and Found Wanting; Chapter Four - "She's a Good Girl When She Ain't Crazy"; Chapter Five - A Death "by Accident"; Chapter Six - Lone Advises Silence; Chapter Seven - The Man at Whisper; Chapter Eight - "It Takes Nerve Just to Hang On"; Chapter Nine - The Evil Eye of the Sawtooth; Chapter Ten - Another Sawtooth "Accident"; Chapter Eleven - Swan Talks with His Thoughts; Chapter Twelve - The Quirt Parries the First Blow; Chapter Thirteen - Lone Takes His Stand
Chapter Fourteen - "Frank's Dead"Chapter Fifteen - Swan Trails a Coyote; Chapter Sixteen - The Sawtooth Shows its Hand; Chapter Seventeen - Yack Don't Lie; Chapter Eighteen - "I Think Al Woodruff's Got Her"; Chapter Nineteen - Swan Calls for Help; Chapter Twenty - Kidnapped; Chapter Twenty-One - "Oh, I Could Kill You!"; Chapter Twenty-Two - "Yack, I Lick You Good if You Bark"; Chapter Twenty-Three - "I Coulda Loved this Little Girl"; Chapter Twenty-Four - Another Story Begins;