Eli's Justice
Reckoning at Shadow Gulch (An Eli Stone Western, Book 1)
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Narrado por:
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Henry Marshall
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De:
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Daniel Griffin
Gunsmoke curls. A stranger rides in. And in the heart of Montana's Shadow Gulch, Eli Stone's search for justice is about to ignite.
Eli Stone doesn't shy away from the ghosts of his past. As he urges his horse down the winding trails into the frontier town of Shadow Gulch, he's greeted by a place where fortunes are for the taking and survival is for the ruthless.
But Eli, marked by a life of hardship and the scars of battles survived, seeks something more than gold—redemption.
When the town's simmering tensions boil over, Eli finds himself in the midst of lawlessness, with the innocent paying the price. Driven by a code as unyielding as the mountains around him, he takes a stand, ready to rewrite the town's destiny with the steadfast aim of his six-shooter.
Eli's Justice is the gripping first installment in the Shadow Gulch Saga. If you like relentless heroes, vividly painted Western landscapes, and high-stakes showdowns, then you'll love the tale of Eli Stone's fight for a peace that's as elusive as a desert mirage.
Buy Eli's Justice to join the fight for order in the chaos of the Wild West today!
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Outstanding western
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Awesome
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Will He or Won't He?
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Hits the bullseye with its raw authenticity!
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The main character, Eli Stone, has settled in Shadow Gulch to escape a past of violence and has committed to being a peaceful man. That internal struggle is a major element of the book, taking up pages and pages, yet the author never really explains why. Why did a lawman suddenly take off his badge and eschew violence? At one point, he hints at a time when Eli went too far and took justice into his own hands, but the explanation did not match the time spent on creating this inner turmoil. Such an important character element needs a compelling reason.
PLOT (MAY CONTAIN SPOILERS): The story is of a town protecting itself against an attack by outlaws. However, the description is more of an invading army rather than a band of outlaws. The story could have been set in medieval times between two warring kingdoms. In the Old West, it would have been more realistic as a range war. When the author finally gave a purpose for the outlaws being there, it started to make sense, but the action didn't quite match the purpose. (A single man seeking vengeance against Eli). Otherwise, the outlaw gang was huge, used military tactics, and had siege weapons (catapults). All a bit far-fetched. The author could have focused on the story between Eli and the vengeful outlaw to make it more personal and realistic. The final face-off was insignificant in comparison with the rest of the book.
Another issue I had was that the Native American characters felt like a modernized caricature. They weren't treated as actual human beings with strengths and weaknesses. Also, the townspeople were the weakest bunch of frontiersmen and women I've ever heard of. Ranchers didn't know how to use a gun. Miners didn't know how to fight. Farmers didn't know how to use a hammer. They were all so helpless that they wouldn't have lasted five minutes on the trek west.
NARRATION: The narrator has a good voice and tone. He has a strong Canadian sounding accent, so don't expect a Western accent. That's not a critique, just an observation. The narration, however, was excruciatingly slow. I normally listen to audiobooks between 2.0x-2.5x speed. For this book, I had to max out at 3.5x speed just to reach my normal listening speed. It's a good thing the software allows for speed adjustments. Otherwise, he did a good job, and I would listen to books narrated by him again.
Sometimes a Tree is Just a Tree
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