Friday, September 19, 2014

HOW JOHNSTONE MCCULLEY CREATED ZORRO & HIS OTHER NOVELS OF BOLD CABALLEROS IN OLD CALIFORNIA

The following is from the back cover of a late 1940s paperback edition of Caballero's Penance:




JOHNSTON McCULLEY's novels of old California are far from the usual run-of-the-mill adventure story. Tiring of the stereotyped backgrounds other authors used, McCulley researched the early mission days in California and wrote The Mark of Zorro, a story that won the hearts of readers around the world. Using the same background, he went on to write nine more exciting and carefully researched tales of Old California, using the techniques he learned writing pulps to give them pace, suspense, and an unequalled panache. Each of the stories McCulley' set in Old California contains an authentic flavor of the proud Castilians who once ruled the Pacific Coast, the Franciscan friars who built a civilization out of wilderness and were the supreme arbiters of all spiritual and moral matters—and a real- feeling for the underdogs, the disinherited peons on whose backs that elegant civilization was carried.

http://www.amazon.com/Caballeros-Penance-Annotated-Proud-Forced-ebook/dp/B00N3OYNLW/ 
Forced to Live as a Peon in Penance for His Sins - He Learned What It Truly Meant to Be a Caballero!

From the author of The Mark of Zorro comes another thrilling novel of swordplay and romance in Spanish California. Don Fernando Venegas, caballero and scion of a proud Castilian family, knew nothing of the sweat and suffering of those beneath him. That is until he killed a rival in a duel, with malice in his heart, and accepted the penance imposed by his priest and confessor, Fray Marcos. For three months he must live as a peon, enduring the blows, the toil and humiliation that is their daily lot, forbidden under pain of being refused absolution to ever reveal his true status.
How Don Fernando, now known only as Fernando, met up with the mysterious peon Pablo, the giant outlaw El Cougar, his beautiful sister Singing Wind, and the evil, sheming Luis Rios —how he saved the peons from being dupes of an unscrupulous demagogue working for Rios—how he almost lost his inamorata, the lovely Senorita Manuela Moreno, and his own head—how he be¬came a champion of the downtrodden, whose swordplay and daring equaled those of Zorro . . . makes a swift, action-packed tale of Spanish California guaranteed to thrill every reader who loved the same author's tales of the black masked carver of Zs! 


Monday, September 8, 2014

SEE "BOLD CABALLERO" THE FIRST SOUND ZORRO MOVIE, IN COLOR, FREE! NO SIGNUP OR CATCHES!

The Bold Caballero, released in 1936, was both the first sound and the first color Zorro film. It stars Robert Livingston,Heather Angel, and Sig Ruman. It was written and directed by Wells Root, father of Jock Root, a close friend of our publisher. 


 


The newspaper blurb for the move read: The Commandant is making life rough for the colonials in Spanish California. While trying to help, Zorro is charged with the murder of the new Governor, but in the end he triumphs over the evil Commandant.















Don Diego declares his love for the beautiful senorita.


















                        Zorro unmasks.






Sig Ruman as the villain.



Watch this classic Zorro film now!


More novels of lighting swordplay and thrilling romance in Old California by the author of The Mark of Zorro - for sale at Amazon in Kindle, only $1.99 each.

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