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Seller's Description:
Very Good in Very Good jacket. Size: 8vo-over 7.75"-9.75" tall; First edition hardcover in very lightly bumped blue paper covered boards with black spine titles. Frt board and frt dj panel has an impression from something pressing against it. Very clean former library book with fep removed, library stamp on half title page along with a small spot of white-out. 187pp crisp and clean with some now unfolded dog-eared tips. Original color illustrated dust jacket shows color loss at tips, and one micro chip at head of frt gutter, no tears. White background rear dj panel is clean and has a b/w photo of the author with his two dogs, a German shepherd and a terrier type. A Navajo Indian, in a moment of vision, gave the Pacing White Stallion the name of 'Banner'. The horse had come up over the Colorado Rockies into the Bad Lands of Dakota, then being ravaged by the new railroad thrusting westward into Wyoming. An Arkansas gambler, Jim Moody, working on the railroad, heard of the almost legendary white stallion and became obsessed with capturing him. All through the long winter at the railroad camp, he brooded over plans to trail the horse and his herd as soon as the spring came. Brushing aside the warnings of his two friends, Frank Wallace and Clay Brack, he set off as soon as the first hints of spring opened up the mountain trails. Moody little realized what lay ahead. Day after day he followed a trail that led to what he finally called 'the Pacer's nowhere', and it was only in the Big Butte country, beyond the great Colorado River, that he became the crazy, burnt--out wild horse hunter who refused to give up.