Last Wolf at Eagle Well


Book Description

A Native American FBI agent must navigate the wilds of New Mexico—and deadly legends of the past—to catch a killer in this chilling crime novel. Rookie FBI agent Rusty Redtail is a man of two worlds—the federal government’s world of law and order, and the Muscalero Apache’s world from which he came. So he’s a natural choice to take on the case of a savage murder involving a Federal Bureau of Land Management agent in a remote region of New Mexico. But death is nothing new to the area. There are plenty of unsolved murders, disappearances and unusual fatalities dating back hundreds of years. Most involve the legendary Wolf family—now deceased—whose secret Eagle Well is rumored to hold both golden treasure and a cache of damning information. Many have searched for hit. And many have died trying. Someone is still protecting the Eagle Well. And if Rusty can’t put together the clues of the past, his own future is going to be cut brutally short . . .




Last Regulator at Roswell


Book Description

About the Book Last Regulator at Roswell is a fictional story written based on the headlines in today’s real world. It explores the impacts of illegal immigration and looks at the ways events of the past impacted the reality of today. About the Author Robert C. Mowry was born in Butler, PA in 1948. He currently resides in Las Cruces, New Mexico. He is an amateur Southwest historian. He has spent many hours in historical areas such as ghost towns, old museums, remote ranches, and the like.




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Traditions of the Osage


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Fieldiana


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Publication


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Abstracts : p. 51-60.




The Last Wolf


Book Description

In 1743, according to legend, the last wolf in Scotland was killed by a huntsman near Inverness. At the time the extinction of wolves in Scotland was celebrated. But since then deer have multiplied in the Highlands, destroying the vegetation on which an array of wildlife depends and creating a barren, treeless landscape. Gradually it has become clear that the entire eco-system has been thrown out of balance by the elimination of a top predator. Now there are calls for a limited reintroduction of wolves into Scotland as a way of healing the damaged land. The wolf has been the victim of black propaganda since ancient times. By tellers of folk tales and historians alike it has been described as a slayer of babies, a robber of graves, a devourer of battlefield dead. In this passionate polemic, Jim Crumley argues that these stories are pure fiction, a distortion of reality which prevents people from thinking rationally about the huge benefits the presence of wolves could bring to Scotland. Now is the time for myths to be dispelled, and for the wolf to return to its old home in the highlands.




Alba, the Last Wolf


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Wolf Vs. Golden Eagle


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"The mountain habitat provides shelter and water for cunning predators, and the wolf and the golden eagle thrive there. The wolf can travel 50 miles a day to find prey. The striking force of a golden eagle's talons can be compared to that of a bullet. But which animal is the fiercest of the ecosystem? Compare and contrast each animal's features and skills before you declare the winning predator"--