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Hardcover Milo Talon Book

ISBN: 0553062964

ISBN13: 9780553062960

Milo Talon

(Book #8 in the Talon and Chantry Series)

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Format: Hardcover

Condition: Good

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Book Overview

Milo Talon knew the territory and the good men from the bad. He had ridden the Outlaw Trail and could find out things others couldn't. That was why a rich man named Jefferson Henry hired Milo to hunt... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

5 ratings

Rough and Tumble

Read any Louis L'Amour book and you've pretty much read them all. All of them have short tempered Irish men and plenty of trouble. Milo Talon hires himself out because of needing money to a job that requires him to find a lost fortune in gold. There is a woman driven by a desperate fear and Milo has to plunge ahead regardless of what may come. His rule is: "Plunge in and let the devil count the dead". Authentic, perhaps. At least the locations of L'Amour's novels were suppose to be real places he had been. His characters are rather stilted at times, and do ridiculous things at times, yet it is easy to see how he has been rated as one of the best in this genre.

The Most Difficult job for Milo Talon

"Jefferson Henry, I am beginning to wonder about you." Milo cannot decide what to believe or not to believe. He never knows who might turn their back on him at any time. The author Louis L'amour of Milo Talon, tries to convey that people cannot trust each other. People always need to keep an eye on even your closest friends. This reveals a life long lesson in which the author may have gone through earlier in his life. It reveals a typical hardship that people these days go through to find trustworthy people. This novel talks about Milo Talon, the main character, being hired by a well respectable man named Jefferson Henry to find a missing girl. He finds it hard to search for the girl due to other outlaws trying to kill him. He must go out in the desert and into the mountains to search for her while covering his back and protecting himself. He trades horses daily, hides in mountains, runs across open territory, and nearly gets killed before the end of the novel. The setting for the book makes it very appropriate, the mystery and adventure mood of the book makes it more exciting. The mountains, deserts, and caves make it the most important aspect of the book. The terrain makes it appropriate because it puts a lot of stress on him, his horses, and the outlaws who are chasing him. The setting also changes from hour to hour. He says to Pablo, "I'll help you move camp, I just want your boss to find you alive in a little bit." The appropriate characterization reveals the book to be very effective in that the men reveal to be rough people in the Midwest, just looking to cause a fight. The men and women talk with country accents just as they should because they live in the western part of the United States and sometimes can be classified as "country people." People in the country seem to be thought of as bad people or up to no good. The characters in the book really create a good tone because they seem very rough an grungy, cuss, ride horses, shoot at each other, and drink beer. They make the characterization appropriate for the book in this Mid-western town. L'amour portrays this book as having a boring plot, because of Milo's lack of an outgoing attitude. He sits back and lets the other men make a move first. In the long run, it helps Milo, but it ruins the plot at the beginning. He tries to make a game out of his search instead of taking it as serious as he was hired to do. If he took charge in his search for the girl, the plot would change, and it might make the book more interesting. Although, good things become of the plot, Milo brightens the book as he looks for the missing girl. A lot of people help him as well, for example, he has Pablo who shot a man, and German Schafer helps him hide from the men chasing him. Milo backs this up by saying "you had expected to ride up here and frighten us, running us out of the country perhaps." The language that L'amour uses turns out to be very effective. L'amour uses a informal w

Milo Talon

"Maybe when they kill so many they can't believe it's happening to them." This quote shows a very typical trait of the characters. Louis Lamour really makes the reader wonder if their friends might actually murder people. In his book, he sets everything in a small town to make it seem as if everybody knows everybody. Readers will soon realize that everybody starts looking over their shoulders at all times, especially Milo Talon, because people like John Topp are strolling around town looking at him. The story will keep you nervous throughout the whole book. The book starts out with Jefferson Henry asking Milo Talon to find his granddaughter. Milo goes through a lot of twists and turns trying to find her. He ends up killing a few people and a mountain lion. He stares death in the face just about the whole story. He makes some friends, loses some, and gains a lot of respect around town. However, in the end, none of that really matters and Milo learns not to get comfortable with one town. The setting of the story really makes the book work well. Louis Lamour sets the story in a small town. The town sets a picture in most people's mind of a small western town, that shootouts occur at all the time. The only place to stay in the town is a very small motel, with a restaurant called Maggie's next too it. German Shafer runs the restaurant and gives lots of information to Milo throughout the book. Everybody else lives on the outskirts of the town. Milo says, "Even a dude could come to love this land." He means it too, because he becomes kind of at home in the town also. The characters really make this book good. They have a lot of good and bad characteristics, but most of the people there are pretty two faced. Milo Talon seems to be the James Bond of the Old West. He will do anything and everything to achieve his mission. There are also characters like John Topp, who follow Milo around the whole story and watch him, keeping him on his toes. John Topp and Milo end up going to battle towards the end of the book. The characters all range from no good mass murderers, to sweet old women that try to keep the story interesting. The plot of the story stays very interesting throughout most of the story. The whole story leads up to the end through foreshadowing. Milo always see's things before they can happen. He always has a feeling that people are watching him and that somebody will probably try to kill him. Flashback is not really in the story until the end when Milo remembers, "John Topp had a belt with silver on it," he saw the reflection and knew it was him. The conflict stays strong all through out the story, like Jefferson Henry staying in the shadows, but still trying to kill Milo with his other men. The language of the story consists of Milo telling the story in narrative. Imagery shows up a lot especially when Milo explores things, like when he talks about being stuck under the rocks after her got shot. If Milo's in t

A good read!!!

It was very interesting and quick to read.

A Great western mystery

Milo Talon, son of Em Sackett, is hired to find a missing girl and return her to her grandfather, but all is not as it seems and Milo finds himself in a complicated mystery. An exelent novel with a good mystery plot, very well written and suspencefull. A must for all western fans, I found it impossible to put this book down once I'd started.
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