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A Coon Dog Named Trailer

Harlan Creed

$18.95

Paperback

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English
Outlaws Publishing LLC
31 January 2026
BACK-COVER BLURB

In the hard country of the frontier, a man survives by his hands, his word... and his dog.

Jed Callahan has carved out a quiet life in the hills, far from towns and farther still from trouble. All he asks is the land, honest work, and the steady companionship of Trailer-his blue tick hound, one of the finest hunting dogs ever to trail a scent. Together, they hunt to eat, work to endure, and live by the old rules that keep a man standing.

But the hills remember everything.

When danger comes creeping back into Jed's valley, it doesn't announce itself with gunfire. It arrives on the wind, carried by unfamiliar scents and men who don't respect what they don't understand. As the threat grows, Jed must rely on the one partner who has never failed him-a hound with the heart to hold a line and the courage to finish the trail.

A Coon Dog Named Trailer is a classic Western novella about loyalty earned, hardship endured, and the unbreakable bond between a man and his dog. Written in the spirit of frontier realism, it's a story of grit, loss, and quiet hope-where a good hound proves that some legends don't ride horses... they run the woods.

Clean. Powerful. Unforgettable.
By:  
Imprint:   Outlaws Publishing LLC
Dimensions:   Height: 229mm,  Width: 152mm,  Spine: 3mm
Weight:   100g
ISBN:   9798233175572
Pages:   64
Publication Date:  
Audience:   General/trade ,  ELT Advanced
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active

Harlan Creed writes hard, clean Westerns rooted in grit, consequence, and quiet resolve. His stories favor fists over speeches, choices over chance, and men who stay just long enough to set things right before riding on. Drawing inspiration from classic pulp Westerns and mid-century paperbacks, Creed's work focuses on small towns under pressure, moral crossroads, and the cost of standing your ground when walking away would be easier. His prose is spare, direct, and grounded in the dust and sweat of the Old West-where violence is never glamorous and courage rarely announces itself.

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