Presenting Nolan Gene Fondren's first full length novel, A Stranger Comes to Town: Tales of an Arizona Ranger. In this work, Nolan's imagination and fiction are heavily influenced by his father's vibrant stories of life as a Texas rancher.
Tuesday, June 11, 2013
The Tale Continues
Patrick William Graham Jr. was destined to be small of stature, but that didn’t mean he was short on courage. He grew up with a Cherokee tribe and became blood brother to the chief ’s son, Leaping Wolf. One of Pat’s first toys was a hand-carved wooden
pistol; when his draw was faster than his father’s, he was given a working gun.
When tragedy strikes, leaving Pat’s father dead and his mother remarried to a man Pat despises, he leaves his tribal home. Out in the world, his small frame makes him an easy target for bullies, predators, and petty men with something to prove. After he kills a man who was riding him for being small, Pat’s life changes in ways he can’t control. He sells his skills as a gunman. In Mexico, he protects a silver mine from banditos and then helps them to improve their operation.
One fateful day, however, on a job rustling cattle, he finds God and a better way to live.
Pat is soon welcomed as the youngest Arizona Territorial Ranger, and he puts his skills and talents to the Lord’s work. He prevents war with the Indians seven times. But his life isn’t all heroics and escapades. Along the way, he also finds a bride, buys a ranch, and works with a
family named Earp.
Inspired by the stories told to him by his Texas rancher father, songs, and classic Western tales, A Stranger Came to Town is Nolan Fondren’s love song to a long-lost time and place.
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