"Mountain men and fur traders were the first to travel the route that would one day become the Oregon Trail. In their wake came missionaries who wrote letters and reports describing the far side of the continent and praising the mild climate, healthful conditions and the deep, fertile soil. Histori
More Tales of the Wild West
โ Scribed by Max Brand
- Book ID
- 110710049
- Publisher
- Dorchester Publishing
- Year
- 2011
- Tongue
- en-US
- Weight
- 134 KB
- Category
- Fiction
- ISBN-13
- 9781428503328
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
โฆ Synopsis
This collection features six classic Max Brand stories, including the last piece of fiction he ever wrote, all available for the first time in paperback.
๐ SIMILAR VOLUMES
"The men who ride the open range of the far West are known under a variety of names: vaquero, range rider, mustanger and buckaroo, but the name most commonly known is cowboy. The nature of a cowboy's work demands independence and toughness. He is a man of action; yet the long, lonely hours spent in
"Early-day women of the West are depicted in fading photographs: a gaunt, bonneted figure in a long dress walking beside a wagon, baby cradled in her arms, children scattered behind, a woman, looking older than her years, stirring lye soap over an open fire, a dancehall girl on stage, miners watchin
Phyllis Bentley returns to the West Riding to tell tales of life, love, murder, betrayal and friendship. Amongst the familiar mills, towns and rolling hills, we find heart-warming โ and sometimes *heartbreaking* โ characters brought to life with Bentley's charismatically authentic touch. Broken into
"Born into every generation are a few restless souls who long for adventure. In the early 1800s this wild breed became mountain men who headed up the Missouri, crossed the Rock-ies and continued west, hunting, trapping and exploring as they went. One mountainman,reflecting the general attitude of t
"Through bravery, courage and strength of character these men and women stood head and shoulders above their contemporaries. They are our true Western American Heroes. "