Demon Canyon
by
Book Details
About the Book
Western Wyoming.
Demon Canyon. The French called
it the Canyon of Devils, and steered
clear of it. Lewis and Clark heard
about it and made an entry in their journals but never went near it. Hearty and fearless fur trappers shuddered at
the mere thought of it. And the
mysterious and unseen Sheep Eater Indian tribe worshipped it, willing to kill
to keep it hidden.
Early historical reports buried in Canadian Eyes-Only vaults label it the greatest gold
find in the history of the nation, containing solid gold quartz worth billions,
yet it has never been mined. Today
satellite-mapping instruments have measured it and evaluated its worth, but
mining patents have not been sought.
Not until the Freedom of Information Act has it even been possible for
the average citizen to learn of the existence of Demon Canyon--and the obscure
story that has caused its burial among the unsolved mysteries of the early
western frontier.
In the early 1870s, after most mining efforts had
played out across the mountains in Western Wyoming, an eastern adventurer casts
his fortune and fame on the fates of a soiled map that claims to show the only
entrance to the Canyon of Demons and the solid gold veins along its steep, hidden
walls. He forces his beautiful, yet
vulnerable estranged wife to join him and she attracts the eye of a
down-and-out western man in Larame named Bryce Taggert.
Haunted by the woman's beauty, and knowing the
easterner will lead her to her death on the dry, Indian-infested plains,
Taggert turns away from a job offer that would put him back in business, to
trail the small party. An Indian
fighter, army scout, and teamster, Taggert is forced to use all his knowledge and
skill to keep himself and the woman alive, not just from Indians, but from
hardcases hired to make sure the easterner doesn't return to New York to upset
the empire of the Combine he is out to destroy.
Drawn by the possibilities of gold, intrigue, and
getting even with a man she despises, the woman lures Taggert into Sheep Eater
country where unseen forces whistle through the trees and leave footprints in
the soft loam--forces even the Sheep Eater Indians, who have never been seen by
men, give a wide berth to yet protect to the death.
Taggert finds that getting into Demon Canyon is one
of the toughest things he has ever accomplished only to discover that getting
out will be even more difficult. Yet,
even if he gets out alive, who will be waiting for him and the gold he might be
carrying?
Historically authentic, from mining towns to the old
Mormon Trail, from the Sheep Eater Indians no one has ever seen, to old Fort
Larame, this fast-paced adventure story builds to an unforeseen climax amid the
mysteries of the high mountain passes even Jim Bridger avoided.
About the Author
Del DowDell is a talented writer, speaker and
artist. He has written over a dozen fiction books, nearly a dozen non-fiction
works, more than two dozen screenplays, and lectured in over 40 states. As a scientific hobbyist and researcher, he
has written several volumes on the fallacies of scientific beliefs, such as the
Inaccuracy of the Carbon-14 Time Clock,
Scientific Refutations of Organic
Evolution, The Fallacy of the Geologic Time Scale, and The Big Bang Theory is a Dud. He has also
authored several works on Mesoamerica and the Andes Mountains, disproving the
old belief that earliest inhabitants of North and South America arrived via a
land bridge across the Aleutians. His
work on What’s What in the Legal Hut
was used by businesses and major corporations to design and implement training
programs on legal management methods.
Del is also a talented lecturer, having been invited
to speak to and train thousands throughout the country on far ranging subjects from
corporate management to self-image psychology.
He developed some of the earliest understandings of Behavioral Styles that swept the country in the 1980s, writing
several works and holding numerous seminars on the subject.
Currently, Del is involved in the organization and
operations of several companies, consults with corporations on management
techniques, provides numerous works to help the fledging writer, owns an
internet retail sales company, and has begun raising, breeding and selling koi
fish.
An avid researcher and trivia buff, all of Del’s
works are both scientifically and historically accurate. As a father of seven and a grandfather of 16
and counting, Del’s diverse and copious experiences and credentials show up in
his ability to write science-fiction, westerns, contemporary political
thrillers, military adventures, and comedic works with equal aplomb.
A former baseball pitcher and architect, Del
currently lives with his wife of 40 years in a house he personally designed and
they built themselves on a high ridge overlooking a spacious valley in a rural
area of Southern Utah.