Skip to content
Scan a barcode
Scan
Mass Market Paperback While Angels Dance: The Life and Times of Jeston Nash Book

ISBN: 0312954611

ISBN13: 9780312954611

While Angels Dance: The Life and Times of Jeston Nash

(Book #1 in the Life and times of Jeston Nash Series)

Select Format

Select Condition ThriftBooks Help Icon

Recommended

Format: Mass Market Paperback

Condition: Very Good

$6.69
Almost Gone, Only 1 Left!

Book Overview

Growing up in Kentucky, the author listened to his grandfather, a horse trader by profession, tell stories about the James Gang. Through Cotton's memories While Angels Sing was created. The story of... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

5 ratings

While Angels Dance

Great read!! Ralph Cotton is a master at western fiction. His characters live in your memory long after the book is finished.They become old friends that you can't wait to see again.

Excelent Page Turner

I have just got into Westerns and where I live, there are no bookstores that sell them. It was when I was visiting my friends up in Canada when I found this book in a used bookstore. At first I wasn't so sure about it. I like factual books and wasn't into historical fiction sorts. This book changed my mind. I loved the adventures and the vivid images of the characters and their personalities make the book come to life and make it believable. There were several times when I had to remind myself that these were fictional events. This book is a keeper and I'm even thinking of getting the rest of the series :)

Jesse James had a twin brother

Jesse James had a twin brother: his cousin, Jeston Nash. Jesse James? Even today the name rings with excitement. Ralph Cotton brings that excitement roaring to life in his romantic first novel: WHILE ANGELS DANCE published by St Martin's Press. One thing about Jesse James, everybody has an opinion, and nobody else agrees with it. With a subject this volatile, you open the book with a ready sneer, ready to pounce on all the facts sure to be a little awry. But there is a delightful surprise in store. This writing is so good the sneer is immediately transformed into a grin of sheer delight. Who cares about chasing down facts when you can go chasing down the old owlhoot trail with the 'real' Jesse James that Mr. Cotton has dreamed up? A writer's job is to raise that curtain of the mind and create a reality the reader can actually see, hear, touch and smell. Ralph Cotton jumps right in, and pulls the reader in after him. In just a matter of minutes the smoke is boiling and outlaws with the bark on stand in the shimmering light with guns blazing. There's no turning back, from the first page to the last, you will be anxiously watching the shadows to see what happens next. "You could stumble into more trouble in two minutes than you could crawl out of in a hundred years." in those days. Jeston Nash killed a Yankee soldier over a horse trade in Kentucky and the only place he could run to was the home of his Aunt Zeralda Samuel, the mother of Frank and Jesse James. "Look here," she said to Doc Samuel. "He looks enough like Jesse to be his brother." Frank and Jesse were off riding under the black flag of Quantrill's guerillas. The rumors of Nash's presence bring them back, leery of a trap. "I'd been drawing a fresh bucket of water from the well; the only sound in the stillness of morning was the squeaking crank handle and the clucking of chickens scratching in the dirt. Then all at once behind me, a horse nickered low, and the single heavy thud of a hoof jarred the ground. I froze, felt the skin ripple on my neck, and wondered in that split second how the hell a rider could've slipped in without them chickens raising a fuss." It was Frank. "Frank could lock on to your eyes like a coiled viper, and though I learned to overcome it in time, that day at the well, off guard, I just stood there staring, dumbfounded by the sudden appearance of this stranger with a friendly smile and a voice like gravel wrapped in silk. And behind him ... less than fifteen feet ... not one rider ... but six! They'd slipped in as quiet as smoke, and sat there atop their horses, looking hard eyed and evil." WHILE ANGELS DANCE has two things going for it: The characters are so real you dread finding out what might happen to them next, and the outlaw humor has your face laughing before you realize your belly is shaking. For example, Quiet Jack had been living with a widow for some time when Jeston came to call. "You know, she killed her husband," Jack said

Stunning

Having read RW Cotton's other work first, I realized when I read While Angles Dance that this is all a part of an ongoing saga that gives a full account of how two troubled young men have allied their lives together in a desperate search for meaning during an insane period of bloodshed and violence. It is easy to laugh, cry, and at times almost bleed right along with his fictional outlaws. Miller Crowe & Quiet Jack are the most tortured, lonesome, complex and compelling characters to ever come out of a western novel. Angels Dance may well be the most spiritual in-depth western novel ever written

Two thumbs up!

Best account of The James Gang ever written. Cotton makes you feel like you are riding along with these outlaws. At last somebody is writtiing westerns the way they should be written. Miller Crowe and Quiet Jack remind me of Butch & Sundance only more real
Copyright © 2024 Thriftbooks.com Terms of Use | Privacy Policy | Do Not Sell/Share My Personal Information | Cookie Policy | Cookie Preferences | Accessibility Statement
ThriftBooks® and the ThriftBooks® logo are registered trademarks of Thrift Books Global, LLC
GoDaddy Verified and Secured