Ina, I am using my tablet now and I don't know how to post a link, but go to good reads.com look for best contemporary Western novels.
Ruby, I read a lot of Louis L'Lamour, from the library! Slap Bookleather: A Spanish painter named Sanjulian- Euroart
This Senior Club has become so busy lately, that I had momentarily lost my sense of direction and ended up in Starbucks, .......... not the same experience at all, Having consulted both Old Moores Almanac's and Google Maps, I rediscovered the one and only "Hi Goodbye coffee shop" So I need a good stiff Irish Coffee to recover from my meanderings.
Terry,you are a world traveler, for sure, and it's always good to see you come through the door! Here's a taste of the Irish Cowboys,to go with our coffee!
@Terry Page , What makes Irish coffee different from say British or American coffee? Is it the grind, or do they put mint in it. If it's alcohol I can't try it, my tummy says no way. So just what is Irish coffee? It looks like a thick cream on top, is it?
Sorry Ina it's alcoholic like a lot of Irish customs Irish coffee (Irish: caife Gaelach) is a cocktail consisting of hot coffee, Irish whiskey, and sugar (some recipes specify that brown sugar should be used, stirred, and topped with thick cream. The coffee is drunk through the cream. The original recipe explicitly uses cream that has not been whipped, although drinks made with whipped cream are often sold as "Irish coffee". @Ina I. Wonder
Saloons of the Old West "Well, there just ain't no talkin' about the Old West, without mentioning the dozens, no hundreds -- er, thousands of saloons of the American West. The very term "saloon" itself, conjures up a picture within our minds of an Old West icon, complete with a wooden false front, a wide boardwalk flanking the dusty street, a couple of hitchin' posts, and the always present swinging doors brushing against the cowboy as he made his way to the long polished bar in search of a whiskey to wet his parched throat".