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  • Ghosts of Bluewater Creek

  • By: Terry James
  • Narrated by: Ferdie Luthy
  • Length: 3 hrs and 33 mins
  • 4.5 out of 5 stars (2 ratings)

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Ghosts of Bluewater Creek

By: Terry James
Narrated by: Ferdie Luthy
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Publisher's summary

Josh McCabe is a man hunter with one thing on his mind: to bring in Abe Lawton, the last and most vicious member of a gang who killed his wife and son. Now that time has arrived, but what Josh doesn’t count on is a smart-mouthed kid out for revenge and a girl in the wrong place at the wrong time. When the showdown comes, it’s quick but far from decisive and leaves all three facing a new more dangerous future.

©2020 Terry James (P)2022 Wordwooze Publishing
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What listeners say about Ghosts of Bluewater Creek

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Very Well Written Western Story

I think the writer did a great job with this story and the various characters in it. I love the way we learn about McCabb in small increments as the story progresses. The Narrator does a Great job with the characters voices and the entire storyline.

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Vengeance is mine, but you're gonna get it

In the rugged expanse of the untamed West, where justice is often as wild as the land itself, the audiobook "Ghosts of Bluewater Creek" gallops forth like a vengeful stallion, echoing the thunderous footsteps of the avenging spirits. Narrated with the gritty resonance of a weathered cowboy, a voice akin to Clint Eastwood's in "Hang 'em High," and infused with the spirit of the determined captains from "Lonesome Dove," this tale rides the trail of retribution through a land scarred by violence and marked by the haunting echoes of wrongs left unrighted.

Terry James crafts a gripping narrative around the unyielding heart of Josh McCabe, a relentless man hunter driven by a single, unrelenting purpose: to bring to heel the last, and the vilest, member of a gang that tore his life asunder. As the acrid dust of vengeance swirls in the air, the stage is set for an unforgiving showdown that stretches like the limitless horizon. In a narrative that unfurls with the solemn cadence of a funeral dirge, McCabe's pursuit of the insidious Abe Lawton becomes a symbol of the very essence of justice in a land where the law often hangs by a frayed thread.

But in the realm of retribution, paths intersect unexpectedly, carving tributaries of fate that flow into one another's course. Enter a smart-mouthed kid, eyes smoldering with the fire of vengeance, and a girl caught in the crossfire of fate's cruel aim. James weaves their lives together with a storyteller's skill, like the lacing of reins through a bronco's bit. The trio's destinies intertwine in a swift, brutal confrontation that leaves wounds both seen and unseen, resonating like the haunting cry of a lonesome wolf under a desolate moon.

As the tale unfolds, the ghosts of history emerge from the mists of time, joining the ranks of those who bore the weight of injustice upon shoulders hewn from the harsh fabric of the West. Echoes of real-life lawmen and cowboys reverberate through the pages, their stories akin to the twang of a harmonica in a windswept saloon. Just as Wyatt Earp, the relentless marshal of Tombstone, sought vengeance for his brother's death in the fierce O.K. Corral gunfight, McCabe stands tall as a kindred spirit, chasing down his own brand of justice through the unforgiving terrain.

The spirit of retribution knows no bounds, as displayed by Bass Reeves, a former slave who transcended his past to become one of the first black U.S. Deputy Marshals. His iron will and determination to hunt down wrongdoers mirror McCabe's unwavering resolve to track down the specter of his past. The very essence of frontier justice finds its embodiment in Wild Bill Hickok, who, fueled by his own demons, embodied a mythic figure of retribution, ever ready to draw his legendary pistols to uphold his own brand of law.

Yet, justice is a thorny rose that often pricks those who wield it. Like the emotionally scarred Captain Woodrow Call of "Lonesome Dove," McCabe walks the fine line between the righteous pursuit of vengeance and the moral ambiguity of his actions. The echoes of Gus McCrae and Call resound, reminding us that the pursuit of justice can be as perilous as a cattle drive through treacherous territory.

In the end, "Ghosts of Bluewater Creek" delivers a tale that captures the essence of a land marred by bloodshed and redemption, where the unforgiving landscape reflects the journey of those who seek to right wrongs, no matter the cost. As the echoes of history and the haunting wail of retribution merge, McCabe's story becomes a tribute to the legends who walked before him, their steps etched in the annals of time like hoofprints in the dust. Terry James paints a landscape where the past and present coalesce, forging a narrative as timeless as the enduring spirit of the West itself. So saddle up, dear listener, and ride alongside Josh McCabe as he chases the ghosts of vengeance down the trail of justice, leaving behind the legacy of a relentless cowboy seeking redemption.

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