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- From: hhenderson@vax.clarku.edu
- Newsgroups: rec.arts.books
- Subject: RE: Good Westerns
- Message-ID: <23DEC92.23081386@vax.clarku.edu>
- Date: 23 Dec 92 23:08:13 GMT
- References: <1ha270INNdai@agate.berkeley.edu> <1992Dec23.190505.4382@linus.mitre.org>
- Sender: news@black.clarku.edu (USENET News System)
- Organization: Clark University
- Lines: 27
-
- Charles Portis' _True Grit_ is a classic Western of recent vintage (1968),
- refreshing because it doesn't deal with the usual gunfighter cliches.
- You can probably guess that from the opening sentence:
-
- People do not give it credence that a fourteen-year-old girl
- could leave home and go off in the wintertime to avenge her
- father's blood but it did not seem so strange then, although
- I will say it did not happen every day.
-
- I will second the recommendation of Owen Wister's _The Virginian_.
- Also Edna Ferber's _Cimarron_, and _Destry Rides Again_ by (I think)
- Max Brand (though a better movie than book). For cowboy stories as
- opposed to shoot-'em-ups there are the Will James books ("Smoky the
- Cow Horse" and "Cow Country", among others), which have excellent
- illustrations done by the author.
-
- A good true-life Western story is Gen. Nelson A. Miles' autobiography
- _Serving the Republic_, which is almost certainly out of print, but
- can often be found in libraries. Miles was an unusual character for
- his time, an officer who gained fame through fighting the Indians, but
- constantly voiced his respect for them as human beings, and believed
- that the U.S. government treated them shamefully. The character
- Nathan Brittles in John Ford's film _She Wore A Yellow Ribbon_ was
- based on Miles.
-
- Heather
- HHENDERSON@vax.clarku.edu
-