Treasure Mountain
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Product Description
TREASURE MOUNTAIN
In Treasure Mountain, Louis L’Amour delivers a robust story of two brothers searching to learn the fate of their missing father—and finding themselves in a struggle just to stay alive.
Orrin and Tell Sackett had come to exotic New Orleans looking for answers to their father’s disappearance twenty years before. To uncover the truth, the brothers enlisted the aid of a trailwise Gypsy and a mysterious voodoo priest as they sought to re-create their father’s last trek. But Louisiana is a dangerous land, and with one misstep the brothers could disappear in the bayous before they even set foot on the trail—a trail that led to whatever legacy their father had left behind . . . and a secret worth killing for.
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #21433 in Books
- Published on: 1984-07-01
- Released on: 1984-07-01
- Original language: English
- Dimensions: 6.88" h x .59" w x 4.17" l, .25 pounds
- Binding: Paperback
- 208 pages
Editorial Reviews
From AudioFile
This novel continues the saga of the Sackett family of the hard-ridin', varmint-infested West, where author L'Amour has so successfully mined his literary gold. What brothers Orin and Tell Sackett are up to becomes difficult to say because they sound exactly alike. And David Straithairn, whose voice could be viewed as the aural embodiment of Big Sky Country, makes every sentence sound like every other sentence. It's impossible to stay focused on the story or to care about the outcome. Y.R. © AudioFile 2003, Portland, Maine-- Copyright © AudioFile, Portland, Maine
Review
Bantam Books proudly publishes the newest Louis L’Amour hardcover:
May There Be a Road
Available now!
From the Publisher
How do you bring a million dollars in gold down a mountain? First you have to find it, and that's mighty hard when you're tracking a trail that's twenty years old. But the Sackett brothers were determined to find the treasure and to discover if their father, who blazed the trail long ago, was still alive. They just hoped that they were smarter than those New Orleans folks who wanted the gold -- and were willing to kill for it.
