
Curly
The Arizona frontier, 1900. An Irish lord and a cattle-rustler's son ride through dust and danger. Roger Pocock's western pulses with the rough energy of a young nation, where a boy's future hangs on the choices of men who understand that redemption isn't given, it's earned. Balshannon carries old world authority into new world chaos; Chalkeye provides steady American grit; and Curly, the son of a rustler, must decide whether blood means destiny or whether a man can choose his own name. The frontier strips away pretense and reveals what people really are. Pocock writes with the economy that Westerns demand - every scene does double duty, every conversation carries hidden currents. This is a story about what we're born into versus what we become.


















