Old Time RadioAudiobookseBooks
Newsletter
eMailPreservation LibraryBargain Basement



Receive our newsletter!



CallFree Old Time Radio download
(Your shopping cart is empty)

 

Golden West Magazine Audiobook January 1929 - 7 hours [Audio CDs] #RA791
The Golden West Magazine Audiobook January 1929
 

7 hours - Audio CD Set


Our Price: $27.98


Availability: Usually Ships in 24 Hours
Product Code: RA791
Qty:

Description
 

The Golden West Magazine Audiobook

January 1929

Read by Milton Bagby and Paul Curtis

 

 

New Stories of Frontier Adventure!
 
The Golden West Magazine was published by The Golden West Publishing Company and Magazine Publishers, Inc. beginning in January 1927 and lasted for 46 issues until May 1931.
 
Tom Chadburn was the original editor and in December 1928, Harold Hersey took over the reins. The January 1929 issue features a beautiful cover painted by Doc Savage artist, Walter M. Baumhofer.
 
These seven stories are torn from the pages of the January, 1929 issue of The Golden West magazine and is read with stirring intensity by Milton Bagby and Paul Curtis.
 
Thundering Hoofs
by Glenn a Connor
When Franey shot a pipe out of Dixon’s mouth, Dixon knew he could handle a six-gun. An’ Franey would handle a lot o’ other things! He was a handlin’ fool from way back!
Read by Milton Bagby
 
Vultures of the Desert
by Fred Harold Talavin
Vultures of the desert, waiting to prey on lone prospectors - poisond waters - gun-slinging, fast moving action - read it and you’ll want more!
Read by Milton Bagby
Chapter 1: The Spell of the Desert
Chapter 2: Wolf Vallon
Chapter 3: Rio Negro
Chapter 4: Over the Lava
Chapter 5: Pleasant Valley
Chapter 6: Back in the Desert
Chapter 7: The Third Party
Chapter 8: A Claim Is Jumped
Chapter 9: A Man Possessed of the Devil
Chapter 10: A Lost Claim
Chapter 11: Squared All Around
 
Film Waddies - Short Story
by Frederick Ryter
When a cow waddy goes into the movies, strange things happen. The rip-roarinest yarn that ever left a pen. Buck Rider - cowboy and actor by proxy - will stick in your mind as a never-to-be-forgotten character.
Read by Paul Curtis
 
The Angel-Faced Kid - Short Story
by S. A. Dean
A story of six-gun justice. The Sheriff said ‘no gun-play’, but The Angel-Faced Kid, a whiz at the draw, decided that jail was O.K. as long as he got his man.
Read by Milton Bagby
 
The Last Roundup - Short Story
by William F. Bragg
A up-roarin’ two-gun action story of a lead-slingin’ war between nesters and cowmen. The thrilling yarn of Black Powder Bill and his rapid fannin’ of a six-shooter.
Read by Paul Curtis
 
The Winning Hand - Short Story
by Dan T. Kelliher
Poker is a man’s game. When a high falutin’ tenderfoot who is deef an’ dumb besides, plays it he’s got to watch his P’s an’ Q’s or his Aces an’ Queens. Well, Ferdinand De Lacey did just that!
Read by Milton Bagby
 
Shorty’s Gilded Goads - Short Story
by Herndon Cochran
There’s some waddies who love their cayuses, some who love their saddles or chaps but Shorty loved his spurs. And when Rodigrez, the bandit, came to town Shorty won his spurs too.
Read by Paul Curtis
 

Milton Bagby is a veteran radio announcer and voiceover specialist who first turned to audiobooks in 2010. Since then, Milton has worked on close to two hundred audiobook projects and is a 2017 Audie Awards winner, the audiobook industry's highest award. Drawing upon years of stage acting and the occasional bit part in films, Milton uses his experience to create characters that stand out in the ear of the listener.
 
“I am very much aware that a perfect stranger is going to invest many hours listening to me tell a story. I do my best to give the listener an experience in which the characters in that story come alive and sound real.”
 
When not behind a microphone, Milton is a writer. In addition to the well-received Rick Burkhart crime novels, Milton writes a line of 1950s style pulp stories, and is the author of dozens of magazine articles and two non-fiction books. Milton and his wife live in Nashville.

Share your knowledge of this product with other customers... Be the first to write a review
RadioArchives.com

 About Us
 Privacy Policy
 Send Us Feedback