Oklahoma Books
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Collectible price: $35.00

A giant in the fur tradeReview Date: 2006-08-26
Legendary figure of the early American WestReview Date: 2002-01-12

Used price: $1.80

Wonderful comment on landscape and connection to place....Review Date: 2001-12-16
I was offered an opportunity at a fellowship studying Western literature under Mary Clearman Blew's tutelage a couple of summers ago. I found her insight into Western literature as a whole, man's connection to the landscape, and living in the "Real West" fascinating. She is a true storyteller and a voice for those of us who see ourselves intrinsically linked to this place we call home.
On a side note: My favorite Blew short story is "The Sow in the River," which can be found in the book _A Circle of Women_. Excellent reading!
Bone DeepReview Date: 2000-05-09

Used price: $19.90

wild west readerReview Date: 2007-01-22
A fascinating tale of power and corruptionReview Date: 2003-05-15

Used price: $1.91

Thrilling AccountReview Date: 2007-03-16
Updates a classic originally published in 1967Review Date: 2007-06-09

Used price: $8.11

Cafe Oklahoma - wonderful!!!!!!!!Review Date: 2008-07-26
cafe oklahomaReview Date: 2008-02-11


Life on the road to California with 4000 Texas Long Horns with a little romance thrown-in along with tragedyReview Date: 2007-05-16
Hungry CaliforniosReview Date: 2003-05-01

Used price: $4.50

Buck realizes his potentialReview Date: 2006-06-11
Buck (a dog that is half St Bernard and half Shepherd) goes through many lives, trials, and tribulations finally realizing his potential. On the way he learns many concepts from surprise, to deceit, and cunning; he also learns loyalty, devotion, and love. As he is growing he feels the call of the wild.
This book is well written. There is not a wasted word or thought and the story while building on its self has purpose and direction. The descriptions may be a tad graphic for the squeamish and a tad sentimental for the romantic. You see the world through Buck's eyes and understand it through his perspective until you also feel the call of the wild.
The Call of the Wild - Dog of the Yukon (1997)
THIS is the edition to getReview Date: 2000-07-21
The elegant Library of America edition of "London: Novels and Stories" has three complete novels _The Call of the Wild_, _White Fang_, _The Sea-Wolf_, and a very well chosen selection of stories. It's great. Viking's _The Portable Jack London_, is cheap and excellent; it's edited by Earle Labor, has _The Call of the Wild_, and an excellent selection of short stories, nonfiction, and letters. If you want copies of _The Call of the Wild_ to give to LOTS of friends, the Dover Thrift Edition is just a buck.
But if you want _just_ The Call of the Wild, this edition is nice enough to give as a gift, is clear and legible, and has just the right amount of pictures and annotations. Not a scholarly work, but every time you get to one of those places where you have a question--where was Dyea? What was the "Chinese lottery?" Could a dog really pull a thousand pound sled? there's Dyer with the answer.
If you're interested in Jack London, take a look at the alt.books.jack-london Internet discussion group--see "about me" for details.


This Cherokee approvesReview Date: 2001-05-17
A Great Piece of History!Review Date: 2001-04-05

Used price: $15.33

The Cherokee Nation in the Civil WarReview Date: 2008-02-15
The C herokee Nation in the Civil War.Review Date: 2007-04-10
verison.
Used price: $33.95

Excellent bookReview Date: 1998-08-23
A fine scholarly historyReview Date: 2005-01-07
McLoughlin delineates the strengths and weaknesses of the various denominational missionary efforts. The Congregationalist/Presbyterians overemphasized education and the formalities of religion to the detriment of evangelism. The Moravians were steady and apolitical, but their reliance on the lot and their determination to establish a farming community of converts retarded their work. The Methodists' emotionalism and protracted meetings attracted the Indians (who had counterparts in their own religion), but their anti-intellectualism, low standards for conversion, and "sheep stealing" were negative traits.
My only criticisms of this long book (with fairly small print) are that McLoughlin sometimes goes beyond evidence in trying to reconstruct the nature of the anti-missionary reaction among the Cherokees and that he asserts mundane reasons for decisions that the missionaries more likely made on spiritual grounds.
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On January 1, 1827, he and Black Harris set off for the States on snowshoes, reaching Lexington, MO, by early March after a difficult journey. For the next few years Sublette took provisions from Missouri to the mountain rendezvous, only to return in the winter with that year's furs. In 1830, he used ten wagons, the first wagons to go through South Pass. Smith, Jackson, & Sublette sold out to the Rocky Mountain Fur Company that same year, and in 1831 he set out with Smith to Santa Fe from St. Louis with trade goods; it was on this trip that the fabled Smith was killed by Cheyennes.
He returned to St. Louis and got together another outfit for the Rockies and was at the Pierre's Hole rendezvous in 1832, where he was wounded during the Battle of Pierre's Hole by Gros Ventres Indians. He returned to the mountains again the following year, reaching the Yellowstone, but was so ill he returned to St. Louis by November. He sold his fur business to the American Fur Company, and then with Robert Campbell in 1834 established Fort William on the Laramie River (later Fort Laramie). The next year Fort William was sold and Sublette retired from the fur trade. He set up a mercantile business in St. Louis and became interested in local politics. He went back to the mountains one last time, in 1843, when he accompanied William Drummond Stewart, a wealthy Scotsman, on a "tour" of the Rockies. He died in Pittsburgh in 1845 of consumption and was buried in St. Louis.
Dale Morgan once wrote that Sublette "was probably the most consistently fortunate man ever to enter the Western fur trade," and other than being wounded at Pierre's Hole in 1832, it appears to be true. He was one of the few mountain men who retired comfortably on the money he made in the fur trade. John Sunder's biography is magnificent and captures the man, his accomplishments, and his times, especially in the mountains, perfectly. It's among the best of the mountain man biographies available, and I recommend it highly to anyone interested in the subject.