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Other editions of book Nevada

  • Nevada

    Zane Grey

    eBook (Ktoczyta.pl, July 22, 2017)
    First published in 1926 and 1927, "Nevada", the suspenseful sequel to "Forlorn River", continues to be one of Zane Grey's most beloved novels. Four years after Nevada had killed three men to clear his friend's name, Ben and Nevada are reunited, but fate again plays a mean trick, and Nevada becomes Jim Lacy again – killer, thief, rustler, and notorious gunman – in order to save Ben from financial ruin. In Nevada, another romantic couple comes along, Marvie Blaine, and the daughter of backwoods rustlers, Rose Hatt. The primary action of this novel is in Arizona, where the forces of good and evil clash as honest ranchers are threatened by pernicious rustlers. All conflicts are resolved, and loving-kindness breaks out at the end of the novel – after the gunfight.
  • Nevada

    Zane Grey

    eBook (Reading Essentials, Feb. 19, 2019)
    Returning after five years, Tom McComber found that the peaceful little Nevada town hadn't changed much. The Circle-M, the hugh ranch that his father had held through years of bitter conflict, was still intact. One thing, however, was changed. Tom's former wife was going to marry his father!Nevada, the suspenseful sequel to Forlorn River, continues to be one of Zane Grey’s most beloved novels.
  • Nevada by Zane Grey from Books In Motion.com

    Zane Grey

    Audio CD (Books In Motion, June 15, 2005)
    Alone again! Just like his orphaned boyhood. Those are Nevada's thoughts as he turns from the only home and happiness he has ever known. But it had all been a lie, at least on his part. He was hiding his true identity from his best friend Ben, and the woman he loved, Hettie. They knew him as Nevada, a man they cared for and respected when in truth he was a wandering fugitive gunman, notorious from Nevada clear to Tombstone, Arizona. And now he had done what he swore never to do again, he had killed not one, but three men. But he didn't regret it, he had done it to save his friend Ben from being branded a rustler and going to prison. His sacrifice would now allow Ben to be free, to prosper, and to marry the love of his life. But the price he must now pay, is a living hell. A life alone, a life as his real self -- Notorious Outlaw Jim Lacy, but worst of all, a life without his best friend, Ben, and his most precious Hettie. Thus begins the exciting and emotional sequel to Zane Grey's The Forlorn River. Read by Jack Sondericker. 9 CD's 10.2 Hrs.
  • Nevada

    Zane Grey

    Hardcover (Amereon Ltd, Jan. 10, 1946)
    He was called Nevada, a name he took to lose his past. As a boy he had been thrown among brutal and evil men. He had worked himself above their influence time and again, only to be thrown back, by his own desire for justice or vengeance, into the midst of strife. With a new identity he made a new reputation, but old troubles and old enemies haunted him wherever he went.Nevada was the quiet type who would rather work hard and plan for better days. Skilled with a horse and a rope, he could also shoot fast and straight. As he got closer to thinking he could get back to the woman he loved, a gang of rustlers threatened everything. Once again, he had to choose between risks, if his passions didn t choose for him.First published in 1926 and 1927, Nevada, the suspenseful sequel to Forlorn River, continues to be one of Zane Grey s most beloved novels. Never out of print, it is now available in an Authorized Edition with a new foreword by Zane Grey s son, Loren Grey.
  • Nevada: The Authorized Edition

    Zane Grey, Loren Grey

    Paperback (University of Nebraska Press, July 1, 1995)
    He was called Nevada, a name he took to lose his past. As a boy he had been thrown among brutal and evil men. He had worked himself above their influence time and again, only to be thrown back, by his own desire for justice or vengeance, into the midst of strife. With a new identity he made a new reputation, but old troubles and old enemies haunted him wherever he went. Nevada was the quiet type who would rather work hard and plan for better days. Skilled with a horse and a rope, he could also shoot fast and straight. As he got closer to thinking he could get back to the woman he loved, a gang of rustlers threatened everything. Once again, he had to choose between risks, if his passions didn’t choose for him. First published in 1926 and 1927, Nevada, the suspenseful sequel to Forlorn River, continues to be one of Zane Grey’s most beloved novels. Never out of print, it is now available in an Authorized Edition with a new foreword by Zane Grey’s son, Loren Grey.
  • Nevada

    Zane Grey

    Hardcover (Walter J. Black, Jan. 1, 1960)
    365 paged hardcover "Nevada" by Zane Grey.
  • Nevada

    Zane Grey

    Paperback (CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform, Oct. 12, 2017)
    He was called Nevada, a name he took to lose his past. As a boy he had been thrown among brutal and evil men. He had worked himself above their influence time and again, only to be thrown back, by his own desire for justice or vengeance, into the midst of strife. With a new identity he made a new reputation, but old troubles and old enemies haunted him wherever he went. Nevada was the quiet type who would rather work hard and plan for better days. Skilled with a horse and a rope, he could also shoot fast and straight. As he got closer to thinking he could get back to the woman he loved, a gang of rustlers threatened everything. Once again, he had to choose between risks, if his passions didn’t choose for him.
  • "Nevada"

    Zane Grey

    Mass Market Paperback (Bantam Books, April 2, 1946)
    None
  • Nevada

    Zane Grey

    Paperback (CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform, Aug. 14, 2018)
    He was called Nevada, a name he took to lose his past. As a boy he had been thrown among brutal and evil men. He had worked himself above their influence time and again, only to be thrown back, by his own desire for justice or vengeance, into the midst of strife. With a new identity he made a new reputation, but old troubles and old enemies haunted him wherever he went. Nevada was the quiet type who would rather work hard and plan for better days. Skilled with a horse and a rope, he could also shoot fast and straight. As he got closer to thinking he could get back to the woman he loved, a gang of rustlers threatened everything. Once again, he had to choose between risks, if his passions didn’t choose for him
  • Nevada

    Zane Grey

    Mass Market Paperback (Bantam Books, Jan. 1, 1955)
    A typical western novel.
  • Nevada

    Zane Grey

    Hardcover (Ulverscroft, Jan. 1, 2005)
    He was called Nevada, a name he took to lose his past. As a boy he had been thrown among brutal and evil men. He had worked himself above their influence time and again, only to be thrown back, by his own desire for justice of vengeance, into the midst of strife. With a new identity he made a new reputation, but old troubles and old enemies haunted him wherever he went. Nevada was the quiet type who would rather work hard and plan for better days. Skilled with a horse and a rope, he could also shoot fast and straight. As he got closer to thinking he could get back to the woman he loved, a gang of rustlers threatened everything. Once again, he had to choose between risks, if his passions didn't choose for him.
  • Nevada

    Burt Arthur

    Paperback (Avon, Jan. 1, 1962)
    Returning after five years, Tom McComber found that the peaceful little Nevada town hadn't changed much. The Circle-M, the hugh ranch that his father had held through years of bitter conflict, was still intact. One thing, however, was changed. Tom's former wife was gong to marry his father.