In Armstrong, the first volume in the Custer of the West series, George Armstrong Custer survived the battle at the Little Big Horn, assumed a new identity (Marshal Armstrong Armstrong) and with the help of a multilingual Indian scout, cancan dancers, Chinese acrobats, a savage dog, and a Southern cardsharp, saved the town of Bloody Gulch, Montana, from the oppression of a corrupt Indian trader. · It's a novel called Armstrong and it imagines that Lt. Col. George Armstrong Custer survived the Battle of the Little Bighorn. Written as a letter to Custer's wife, Libbie, it is a page-turning adventure that's genuinely clever and www.doorway.ru: H.W. Crocker III is the bestselling author of the prize-winning comic novel The Old Limey and several books of military history, including Triumph, Robert E. Lee on Leadership, The Politically Incorrect Guide® to the Civil War, The Politically Incorrect Guide® 4/5.
Armstrong. by H. W. Crocker III "Delightfully funny alternative history." —WINSTON GROOM, bestselling author of Forrest Gump and El Paso "Droll satire, this is the West as it might have been if the Sioux hadn't saved us." —STEPHEN COONTS, bestselling author of Flight of the Intruder and Liberty's Last Stand "Crocker has created a hilarious hero for the ages.". H.W. Crocker III. Biography. Historian and novelist H. W. Crocker III's most recent book is Armstrong, a comic novel of George Armstrong Custer surviving the Battle of the Little Big Horn to. I want to tell you about one of the funniest books I've read in a while. It's a novel called Armstrong and it imagines that Lt. Col. George Armstrong Custer survived the Battle of the Little Bighorn. Written as a letter to Custer's wife, Libbie, it is a page-turning adventure that's genuinely clever and engrossing. Armstrong: The Custer of the West Series.
H.W. “Harry” Crocker III has taken it upon himself to resurrect the reputation of George Armstrong Custer, perhaps the most politically incorrect man who ever lived. Custer was the Army officer who, surrounded by whooping Injuns, lost his scalp at Little Bighorn. It's a novel called Armstrong and it imagines that Lt. Col. George Armstrong Custer survived the Battle of the Little Bighorn. Written as a letter to Custer's wife, Libbie, it is a page-turning adventure that's genuinely clever and engrossing. H.W. Crocker III is the author of the bestselling Robert E. Lee on Leadership, Executive Editor of Regnery Publishing, and a former speechwriter for the Governor of California. Educated in England and California, his journalism has been widely published. He has also written a history of the United States military, Don’t Tread on Me; a history.
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