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Texas Books sorted by Average customer review: high to low .

Texas
Big Thicket People: Larry Jene Fisher's Photographs of the Last Southern Frontier (Bridwell Texas History)
Published in Hardcover by University of Texas Press (2008-03-01)
Authors: Thad Sitton and C.E. Hunt
List price: $29.95
New price: $17.95
Used price: $14.99

Average review score:

A Great American Story
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-04-27
Sitton and Hunt recap the Great American Story, told many times in many places in this great nation. Blending a worthy narrative with an amazing array of photographs from Larry Jene Fisher, the authors remind us why and how America became so great and why East Texas is such a magnificent story of its own. Read this book if you want to understand what made America and Texas rich and dynamic. Study this book if you want to recall what we must build on to keep our nation great. There's a reason we are who we are and Big Thicket People captures that story superbly.

Extraordinary photographs/narrative of Big Thicket
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-04-24
This book does a magnificent job of capturing a poorly documented chapter
in our nation's history. Sitton and Hunt's text combined with Fisher's
amazing photography magically transports you to the East Texas of the 1930s and 1940s. In reality, the book transports you to the Old South for these "lost" lifeways were common throughout the South before WWII. If you'd like to know more about the Old South, whether it be fox hunting, tie hacking, turpentining or just the old free range livestock culture, this book is a must.

Again, Sitton and Hunt do a great job of telling/showing the history of the rural South which has not been heavily documented. I highly recommend this book, it is a MUST have.

Excellent Photographic and Narritive Documentary of the Big Thicket
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-04-23
This book offers wonderful photography of an almost lost era in American history. The history of the rural South has not been heavily documented. Sitton and Hunt combine the outstanding photography of Larry Fisher with their wonderful text to make this era come alive. Many of these photographs provide extremely rare documentation of old Southern lifeways, such as turpentining, marking ears of free-range hogs, stave making, etc. I highly recommend this book to anyone interested in the history of the South or East Texas. It is a fabulous resource.

extraordinary pictures of a lost culture
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-04-09
Big Thicket People by Thad Sitton and Charles Hunt provides an invaluable pictorial record of a back woods culture that has faded from the scene.
Larry Jean Fisher moved to Saratoga, Texas and the area called the Big Thicket in the mid 1930s when his first career as a silent movie pianist was ended by the "talkies". We are extremely fortunate that he chose to apply his artistic talents to photography for his pictures provide authentic images of a lost culture.
The Big Thicket is a unique ecological area whose major feature is quite well described by its name. For some the "Thicket" provided a hiding place and for others it meant a meager livelihood, but its harsh and also bountiful environs shaped the lives of those who established homes there. Fisher took pictures of the rustic culture that he found in and around Saratoga. The negatives of his pictures were fortunately passed to the custody of the Lamar University Library where they were finally published by Sitton and Hunt.
The natural history of the Big Thicket was significantly altered by timber-cutting and oil exploration, but it is now slowly reverting to its original state under the protection of the National Park Service's 100,000 acre Big Thicket National Preserve. The Preserve, however, can not bring back the way of life so we are left with the Fisher pictures and the descriptions by Sitton and Hunt.
This short volume provides an excellent review of life in the Big Thicket, but it leaves one wanting more than just this taste of what once was.

Texas
Bill Cherry's Galveston Memories
Published in Paperback by Vanjus Press (2000-11-18)
Author: Bill Cherry
List price: $19.95
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Used price: $15.49
Collectible price: $19.95

Average review score:

Only in America
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2001-01-06
Only in America can one person grow up in a city, remember the details almost to the letter, and then WRITE about his friends, fellow citizens, interesting characters, etc. as Bill Cherry has done. He brings the past, and in some cases the present, to life in Galveston. Anyone who finds people of all kinds interesting will find this book INTERESTING! I am Professor Emeritus of Music, University of North Texas and have followed Bill's career rather closely through the years!

A Smashing Book of Tales about Fabled Galveston Island
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2001-01-06
I've never read a book quite like this, and I doubt you have either. It's a collection of sixty essays, catagorized by subject: Love, Humor, Nostalgia, History, Hurricanes, Religion, Characters and Memories. And these tales could have as easily been written by Daymon Runyon as they were by this talented story teller, Bill Cherry.

Consider some of the titles: "Joe Pajucie, His Red Cadillac and the Four Cheap-Looking Women;" "At Miss Dorothy's: Arthur and Summer Saw the Midnight Sun;" "Baby Doll Pajamas, Spoolies and Tabu Marked Rites of Passage;" Smooching Can Make a Boy and Girl Say Things They Don't Really Mean;" and "Rose, Curly, the Priest and the Doctor above the Dime Store.

And then there's one simply titled "Homer Sectuals." It's about a circa 1954 mayor inviting some teenage boys, who one night were sitting at a drugstore soda fountain, to go with him for a raid he was staging at a public men's room on the beach. Since they had never heard the term "homosexuals" before, the boys thought Homer Sectuals was a dangerous wanted criminal, so they took the mayor up on his offer. This cops and robbers story is a scream because the homophobic mayor gets his just due.

If you've lived or visited Galveston, you may have a 10% advantage on those of us who haven't, but this book is a wonderful experience for readers everywhere, and what makes it exceptional is that these stories are totally non-fiction!

Galveston Memories....
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2007-04-12
This is a wonderful book, and was the start of a wonderful friendship with the author. I had purchased the book in a local bookstore, read it (not once, but twice) and just loved it. Then I was weeding thru my bookshelves to make room for more books and decided I would sell my copy of "Galveston Memories." That on-line sale prompted the author to eMail me, demanding to know why I was selling his book. Didn't I like it? Well, of course I did. Then why sell it? I need to make room for newer books. Well, if you agree to sell something else, I'll come over there and personally sign a hardcover copy of my book for you. And Bill Cherry did just that, and he's been a very good friend to me and my husband ever since. All I can say is this... read "Galveston Memories" -- you will love it, even if you've never heard of or been to Galveston. Just don't try and re-sell it because you'll get a phone call from the author.

An islander who can tell a story
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2001-01-07
I like to go to the Mosquito Cafe in Galveston to hear Bill Cherry tell stories. The coffee and scones are great. But the main attraction is the pure pleasure of hearing Bill tell stories about a quirky island off the Texas Coast that has been home to famous pirates, gamblers, bamboozlers and other assorted characters. The stories in this book originally were published in The Galveston County Daily News. As the editor, I can tell you they passed the muster of tough critics. These are the kind of stories islanders like to read about themselves. The stories Bill tells so well at the cafe over coffee are here in this book. It's not exactly the same as a trip to the cafe, but it's mighty close.

Texas
Blessed McGill (Texas Literary Classics)
Published in Perfect Paperback by John M. Hardy Publishing Co. (2007-10-01)
Author: Edwin Shrake
List price: $17.95
New price: $11.34
Used price: $10.29

Average review score:

Historically Interesting
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-02-24
I saw Mr Shrake on Evan Smith's Texas Monthly Talks, & learned that he'd written books where much of the action takes place near and around where I currently live: east of Austin in the fertile riverlands around Bastrop.
That made me want to order two books & see what could be learned about the lives people led in this area before the turn of the century. What I discovered was probably an accurate "novelized" glimpse into the rugged, rough, dangerous country that bears no resemblance to the present-day idyllic countryside peopled with artists and university types! The stories about McGill and Custer's brother's horse were mesmerizing & I could hardly put them down, no doubt partially because areas that I am familiar with kept cropping up. All in all, both tales provided valuable insights into exactly why and how this part of Texas was the wild, deadly, lawless frontier back in the days before and after the Civil War. Good stories about real people on their own, the stories take on special interest if the geography is personally pertinent.

A wonderful tale of the western frontier.
Helpful Votes: 17 out of 17 total.
Review Date: 1999-06-10
McGill is an inspiring hero, immensely capable, with a huge zest for life. He packs incredible adventures into his short life, yet tells his story in a delightfully laid back style. He combines an interest and tolerance of all ideas, religions and philosophies, with a violent intolerance of certain purveyors of them. McGill is a warrior/philosopher, born, raised and ideally suited to this harsh land. His story is one of violence, love, sin and redemption, but it is often hard to distinguish which is which.

This book is a "must read" for all lovers of powerfully written adventure stories, but may make all other westerns dull and unimaginative in comparison.

A rivetting tale that keeps you guessing.
Helpful Votes: 17 out of 17 total.
Review Date: 1998-08-27
This is an incredible tale from beginning to end. Shrake has developed a character that is the first person born on the American Continent to achieve sainthood, and until the last pages of the book the reader is kept guessing how he could deserve such an honor. The book reads as a memoir written by McGill as he tells the story of his life while awaiting his death. He lives the life of an indian scalper, buffalo hunter, and gold miner in 19th century Texas from the time of the Texas War of Independence until after the US Civil War. The more you read of this man's account of his life, the less you can believe he could ever desert to be Sainted.

This book has long been out of print, and its re-printing is an excellent opportunity for new readers to discover a classic western. Any fan of Larry McMurty's books in the "Lonesome Dove" will love "Blessed McGill" and recognize that McMurty has probably gotten some of his writting style from reading this book.

A blessed read
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2007-12-04
As a student of Texas history in general and a reader of fiction about Texas and the Southwest in particular, I found Blessed McGill by Edwin "Bud" Shrake to be rich with descriptive color and accurate detail about the rugged lives and times of both settlers and natives in the 19th century. The characters are developed in depth.

His repeated use of sensory descriptions such as the smells of things adds a dimensional aspect not usually found in this kind of fare. In my opinion, the only other Western fiction writer who stacks up with Shrake is Elmer Kelton.

Texas
The Blessings of Hard-Used Angels
Published in Paperback by Texas Review Press (2004-10-30)
Author: John Cottle
List price: $16.95
New price: $5.00
Used price: $0.45

Average review score:

Intricate
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2005-01-30
The Blessings of Hard-Used Angels is an enjoyable and rewarding collection of short fiction. John Cottle's stories are fresh with unique, sometimes off-beat, but always-believable characters. I have no qualms in comparing his approach to development with that of more well known Southern writers in an extremely favorable manner. I would then erase the Southern writer categorization, not wanting to represent the collection as anything other than great stories and excellent writing. Annie McGill, my selection for one of the better stories in any collection, is subtle but unrelenting as it delves into and renders an attorney's emotional response to a quandry. Simple enough, short, but accomplished in such a manner as to create a picture far more intricate than its length might indicate.

Stories of discovery
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2004-11-30
John Cottle's writing is like a clear mountain pool--the kind you might be lucky enough to find wandering the deep forested ends of the South. It has that kind of arresting clarity and simplicity and yet such richness of detail--light striking the surface just so, wheeling cascade of ferns, the dark reaches of shadows, rocks stacked in centuries--that tells you from the first you're looking at something you'll remember a long, long time. Of course you will reach your hand to touch such beauty, and the cold shock of that clear water will go straight through your bones--it's that powerful. You'll laugh but you won't leave: in fact, you may even jump right in, boots and all, splashing and swirling, floating for hours, remembering how wonderful it is to be warm-blooded, to be human, to be alive.....If you love masterful writing, memorable characters, and language that tells the truth of living, buy this book now.

The Sound of the South
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2004-11-04
A wonderful debut short story collection from Alabama writer John Cottle. If you love language, you'll love these stories. There are descriptions in The Blessings of Hard-Used Angels that are as lush as the landscape that inspired them. A rich cast of characters, too, their lives tragic, humorous, hopeful and ill-starred. The law is a central theme, what it takes to uphold it, break it, get used by it or simply ignored by it. There is a long tradition of great writing from the South, William Faulkner, Carson McCullers and Flannery O'Connor come immediately to mind. John Cottle's writing is of this tradition and continues it. Do yourself a favour and check this book out. You won't be disappointed.

The Real Thing
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2004-10-28
John Cottle is a master storyteller. One tends to forget, in the midst of all the pseudo-fiction of today that is passed off as literature, that classic, poignant, 'real' literature is still being written. Cottle is one of those Southern writers who has stepped out of the traditions of Tennessee Williams' and William Faulkner to give us touching and masterful art in The Blessings of Hard-Used Angels. But for all of that, he is still lending his own fresh views to the plight of those men and women, the hard living, the hard working, the people we all know, mesmerizing us with prose that is so well wrought that it sweeps the reader right in. One story after another is guaranteed to knock your socks off, so I highly recommend this book. If you only buy one title this Christmas for gifts, make it this one; you can't go wrong.

Texas
Blood & Treasure: Confederate Empire in the Southwest (Texas a & M University Military History Series)
Published in Hardcover by Texas a & M Univ Pr (1995-05)
Author: Donald S. Frazier
List price: $29.95
New price: $8.49
Used price: $8.21

Average review score:

Southern Reach for Empire
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-06-23
An excellent account of the Southern attempt to sieze and hold the western territories. I enjoyed the book and found it easy to read. It covered the southern viewpoint and history of the attempt to secure Arizonia and New Mexico for the Confederacy. The book has good maps that allow the reader to understand the movement across the wide expanse of the Southwest. Personal accounts give a good view of the individaul Texan's view of the campaign and battles. A forgotten theater which was overshadowed by the fighting elsewhere. Dr. Frazier does a good job of showing the strengths and weaknesses of the Confederate Army of New Mexico. The book added to my understanding of this campaign and I recommend to to anyone interested in this campaign.

Great Book--A Must Read--This is for all Civil War Buffs
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 1999-09-02
This book is a must for Yankee Historian

Tremendous book,Eyeopening to the Southern view of the Civil
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 1999-09-01
Fantastic book about the southern struggle to build an empire!All northern history teachers should read this book.I am a U.S.History teacher who wrote a story about my greatgrandfather who was in prison in Texas during the Civil War and DFrazier contacted me for info,thus I have now read his book and it is superb!

Excellent book on a lesser known aspect of the War.
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 1998-12-09
I found this book to be an exciting and revealing look into the western campaign of the Civial War. Dr. Frazier is an incredible story teller as well as a thorough researcher. A must read for anyone interested in the role of the western Confederacy.

Texas
Body Language
Published in Paperback by University of North Texas Press (2006-11-30)
Author: Kelly Magee
List price: $12.95
New price: $7.62
Used price: $7.25

Average review score:

Must read stories!!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-12-31
Beautifully written collection of stories. The author is able to bring you in to the lives of characters from all different walks of life, and capture you with their struggles. These stories will leave you thinking and questioning human nature and the place you come from.

An Electrifying Debut Collection
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2007-02-17
I loved this book of stories so much that it's difficult to know where to begin. Kelly Magee's characters are wonderfully complicated--strong, flawed, compelling, often brutally insightful, almost always sympathetic, and entirely believable. The American landscapes in which these stories take place--the Grand Canyon, New Orleans, the thick heat of Florida--manage to feel both fantastic and utterly recognizable. Perhaps best of all, this book is a tour de force of language. Magee's writing is vibrant, clear-eyed, imagistic, and original--hers is a voice you will want to return to again and again.

A New Vocabulary
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2007-02-15
This book is amazing! The collection of stories won the Katherine Anne Porter prize in short fiction for a good reason - Kelly Magee's skill as a storyteller. Her characters are complex and live complicated lives. Their world is harsh and beautiful, painful and magical, exhilarating, authentic, and accessible throughout this collection. Magee's language is sticky and sharp. Her prose utilizes the economy of words, keen sense of detail, and imagery of poetry. These stories are about being - being southern, an outsider, queer, subversive, and human. The stories make me think of Flannery O'Conner and William Faulkner but also of the photographs of James Agee and Diane Arbus. Magee tells you a story so vivid not only can you see it, you can feel it, too. I can't wait for more....

Boldest New Short Fiction 2006
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2007-02-13
This woman is fearless. She crafts people, topics, and points-of-view with an empathy few possess. The characters in this book are fighters--literally and figuratively. As they seek connection, words fail, and they rely on fists and lips (the body's language) to speak their desires and their fears. They fight lovers, gentrification, weather, neighbors, and themselves to carve out a space to call home. From them, we learn again and again to recognize the hope, dignity, and grace that continue to thrive in unlikely circumstances; we recognize the common needs that connect us all.

Texas
Bonfire of Roadmaps (Brad and Michele Moore Roots Music Series)
Published in Hardcover by University of Texas Press (2007-02-01)
Author: Joe Ely
List price: $19.95
New price: $12.28
Used price: $11.98
Collectible price: $19.95

Average review score:

Epic of the Open Road
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-10-31
Joe Ely has written an epic poem of life on the road, full of wisdom and insanity, that careens from Austin to Denmark, youth to age, and the bright noise of backstage to the profound silence of the stars. Ely has seen it all, done it all, and lived to sing the story in this fine feast of a book. Nibble it or gulp it down, but read it and let it feed your soul. "When a man knows not his next destination, any road he takes will get him there on time," Ely says. With this book, the veteran singer/songwriter arrives in fine style.

Hear Texas Icon Joe Ely Interview on NPR
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-09-29
This excellent road journal by Texas Rock and Roll icon Joe Ely is an enjoyable, refreshing read. It would make a great gift for anyone interested in music. This year Ely was selected for a lifetime acheivement award by Americana. You can go to NPR.com and key word Joe Ely to hear an interview with the author about this book. There are also songs, of course. I absolutely promise you that you will love this book!

Johnny Hughes, author of the Lubbock novel Texas Poker Wisdom.
Texas Poker Wisdom

Joe Ely - Pulsebeat Of A Life Well Lived
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2007-11-05
I am very pleased with "Bonfire Of Roadmaps" by Joe Ely. It is a book to savor over the years ahead and to take on long road trips when I travel. And, if I stay home, then it is a book that can take me on Joe Ely's road trips.
I feel blessed that I was able to sit in the front row at Joe Ely's multimedia presentation of Bonfire Of Roadmaps at the Texas Book Festival held in Austin on November 3rd and 4th, 2007. The audience was packed and enthusiastic. A line formed at the book signing following Joe's readings and songs and video. I was very pleased to have Joe sign my book for me. Later, Joe Ely and Joel Guzman and Joe's band filled the space around the Texas Capitol steps with their magical music and lyrics. Joe was deep into his songs and making every effort to fill each listener with the unique blend of country, roots, wisdom, adventure, personal challenge, disappointments and triumphs of which his music is composed. Much of the time he sang with eyes closed as he drew from deep down the well of his own life experience. I will always remember this concert and I have the book to bring back the feelings of the road, feelings that Joe Ely was kind enough to share with us all.

The Road Goes on Forever...And so, thank god, does Joe Ely
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2007-06-23
Joe Ely is a first class musician. Once you start listening to him, you can't stop, and now he gives us a poetic glimpse at life on the road. Bonfire of Roadmaps delves into the hard life, triumphs, and trials of life as a modern day troubadour, and it is a great read. The chapters flow rhythmically along, bursting with memorable characters, stories, lyrics, and a first hand account of what its like to crisscoss the map playing in dingy bars, auditoriums, hotel rooms, and foreign countries. Joe just keeps going. Do yourself a favor: buy this book, listen to the spoken word cd that comes with it, and then start collecting Joe Ely's albums. He's the best. It's as simple as that.

Texas
Brasada
Published in Hardcover by GoldenIsle Publishers (1999-03)
Author: Don Johnson
List price: $21.95
New price: $17.12
Used price: $7.75
Collectible price: $22.00

Average review score:

BRASADA - A Must Read!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2000-05-27
As an historical writer, I strongly recommend this finely crafted novel. Mr. Johnson has created a Civil War Drama that readers of the Western genre will thoroughly enjoy. It is cleverly constructed with full-dimensional characters and events that will linger long after the last page. A great read!

Brasada by Don Johsson
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2000-04-11
From the back cover of the novel: "The author knows firsthand the locale of this action-packed and fast-paced story. He owned and operated a cattle and horse ranch in the Texa brushland wilderness,in the land known as la brasada . . . . the ranch bordered the Rio Grande for nine miles . . . During the Civil War, wagons loaded with cotton left deep ruts while traveling across the ranch into Mexico. The tracks are visible to this day."

From these roots comes Brasada by Don Johnson, a western novel that is interwoven with some fascinating Civil War History - in particular, how the South financed the War by smuggling its cotton into Mexico and getting paid in gold.

This is a real page-turner that has everything a fan of Westerns and Civil War Novels could ask for, and then some. Just a great introduction to the Western genre for new readers. I strongly recommend it for anyone who likes to read good fiction.

Jerry Patterson, thebuffalokid@aol.com

Brasada is by far one of the best books I've read!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 1999-05-20
The characters are as vivid as those in Lonesome Dove. I hope there is a sequel as the opportunity is there with the gold missing and the key characters still young.

An absolute must for western fans!
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2000-02-09
In the tradition of great Western writers such as Louis Lamour and Elmer Kelton, Don Johnson brings the old West to life in vivid detail in his new novel Brasada. Johnson's knack for storytelling and colloquial style transports the reader straight to the harsh brushland of Civil War-era Texas. Unlike many modern western authors, Johnson has chosen not to blur the line between good and bad, creating the most dispicable of villains in Santiago and effecting sympathy for the story's hero Lance Morgan. But these characters, while morally black and white through most of the story, still manage to develop throughout. The story's intriguing plot and colorful characters make Brasada hard to put down and a must for fans of classic Western novels.

Texas
Bring 'em Back Alive: The Best of Frank Buck
Published in Paperback by Texas Tech University Press (2006-05-30)
Author: Frank Buck
List price: $19.95
New price: $12.84
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Average review score:

Frank Buck Revisited
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2000-07-16
The author does and excptional job on cleaning up some of the objectionable language, and brings to the readers a truly enjoyable book on early "African safari" type activities. Something that young readers as well as old can enjoy.

CHOICE review
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2000-12-07
November 2000, p 554 History of Science & Technology

38-1532 QL61 99-86898 CIP

Buck, Frank. Bring 'Em Back Alive: The Best of Frank Buck, ed. by Steven Lehrer. Texas Tech, 2000. 248p bibl index afp ISBN 0-89672-430-1, $28.95

In many ways, this is a delightful book. Buck was a familiar and heroic figure to many growing up in the 1930s and 1940s; the numerous illustrations recapture those days. The great zoos of the day owed much to him, partly for the specimens he obtained for them but even more for the publicity he generated and shared. His exploits could not and should not be repeated today, but that should not detract from the sense of adventure his stories evoke. His persona was mirrored in the white hunter in King Kong (the Fay Wray version), but his real life adventures were even more thrilling. The comments by Lehrer (Mount Sinai School of Medicine) are interesting and useful, and his choices of episodes from various of Buck's books are well done. All in all, this is an extremely entertaining book, illustrating a different time and written in a way that brings that time to life. General readers. -F W. Yow, emeritus, Kenyon College

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A timeless classic of adventure and daring
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2000-05-23
A timeless classic of adventure and daring for anyone who 'likes to sit on the edge of his chair and gasp for breath.'-New York Times, 1930 In 1930, the publication of Bring 'Em Back Alive, an instant best seller, made its author, Frank Buck, an international celebrity. These animal stories told by the intrepid Texas animal collector and jungle adventurer enraptured generations of boys. Buck spent his life capturing alive every kind of animal, from birds to snakes to elephants. Because there were no tranquilizer darts in those days, he learned to build traps and snares in ways that prevented injury to the animals he caught. Buck always accompanied his animals on shipboard to America to be sure they were well treated, and refused to sell to anyone who did not have an impeccable reputation for animal care. The creator of the Dallas zoo in the 1920s, Buck was a hero ranking with Lindbergh, Ruth, and Dempsey. The dashing and powerful Buck leapt easily from Simon and Schuster's published pages to the silver screen, portraying himself in Wild Cargo and Fang and Claw. This edition, expanded and edited by Steven Lehrer, captures not only the best of Frank Buck, but also the excitement and glamour of an era and lifestyle that still hold readers spellbound.

Buck's adventures rolled into one
Helpful Votes: 9 out of 9 total.
Review Date: 2002-04-16
...

Between 1910 and 1940, when Frank Buck, the big jungle man, did most of his work, cruelty toward wild animals was generally condoned in the name of "hunting" or "sport."

That his trademark motto, "Bring 'em back alive," made him famous, however, indicates that even in his day human consciousness was high enough to appreciate his respect for animals. Today this consciousness is so widespread that no one could become a hero of his stature by trapping jungle animals for profit.

But he understood animals and respected them, even displayed toward them the care of a mother for her child. When they were injured or sick, he personally tended them, a risky business. A 600-pound tapir he was treating almost killed him. A python saw him as a meal, and a cobra spewed deadly venom in his eyes. Attacked by another cobra, he threw his coat over the snake and pounced on it. He held it beneath him as it wriggled to get free until aides could get a grip on its head and pull it out, like a bird extracting a worm from the ground. The python that had him in its grip was one of the very few he had to kill. He managed to get one arm free enough to reach his sidearm; then he put three rounds in the giant reptile's brain.

From his headquarters at the Raffles Hotel in Singapore, he operated a collecting network that spanned the lush jungles of Malaya, Borneo, Sumatra and India. Over the years, he brought back hundreds of thousands of birds and animals of all kinds for sale to zoos, circuses and private collectors. In 1922, he provided Dallas with an entire zoo of more than 500 specimens. In 1948, he returned to his hometown of Gainesville, Texas, to dedicate the Frank Buck Zoo and the Frank Buck Zoological Society.

From Mr. Buck's eight books, Steven Lehrer has selected the "best" of the material. He has fine sensibilities as an editor. However, the books are so full of good, old-fashioned, movie-serial-type adventures in wild, exotic settings, that Mr. Lehrer could have closed his eyes and picked 19 chapters that would make a good collection. The surprising thing is that, until now, no one else has.

What few could have done better, however, is write the illuminating introduction summarizing Mr. Buck's early interest in animals and birds as a boy in Plano and along Turtle Creek, and his brief dalliance with crime, marriage and other enterprises before setting out on his lifelong search for "the source of the wind, the mouth of the river, the oceans to which the fish swam, and the far lands to which the birds flew."

Free-lance writer and reviewer Tom Dodge lives in Midlothian; his new book is Tom Dodge Talks About Texas.

Texas
Buffalo Bill and Sitting Bull: Inventing the Wild West (M.K. Brown Range Life Series)
Published in Hardcover by University of Texas Press (2002-11-01)
Author: Bobby Bridger
List price: $34.95
New price: $24.95
Used price: $12.00

Average review score:

The history behind the art
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2002-11-30
For years, Bobby Bridger has been presenting the story of Buffalo Bill in a musical act called Pahaska, a one-hour series of enthralling songs that tell the story of Bill Cody. Now, Bridger puts down the guitar and period garb from his act to show the history behind his art. In this historical tome, Bridger shows the serious academic side of his art. This book is a must read for anyone interested in the history of the West. Bridger's look at how the modern romantic vision of the American West was created is intriguing and as captivating as his music.

The history behind the art
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2002-11-29
For years, Bobby Bridger has been presenting the story of Buffalo Bill in a one-hour musical act that tells the story of Bill Cody in a series of enthralling songs. Now, with this historical tome, Bridger has completed the circle. This is the history behind Bobby Bridger's art. Bridger puts down the guitar and period garb used in his musical drama to show readers the serious academic side of his personality. If you want some intriguing inquiry and suggestion about how the modern vision of the romantic west was created, this book is a must read.

Bobby Bridger, American Historian, author, entertainer
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2002-12-14
Bridger, decendent of the reknown Mountain man, Jim Bridger, has written an outstanding book on two of history's most colorful and enduring icons of the American west and the dynamic process that each dealt with during the late 19th century America. Bridger is one the best entertainers in American today and this book only shows a small example of his profound abilities. Years of research and documentation of historical events pays tribute to truth, justice, and injustices, of the American West. This book should be a standard fare for all collegiate history classes and for the general public at large. History is always multi-sided and Bridger illustrates that to perfection. This is a must read. It will impress both scholars and the general public. BRAVO MR. BRIDGER! We look forward to the next! Sing on Great Spirit!

The history behind the music
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2002-12-05
For years, Bobby Bridger has been entertaining audiences musically with his Ballad of the West. One of the hour sets, Pahaska, tells the story of Buffalo Bill in what Bridger describes as Homeric ballads. Now, Bridger puts aside the guitar and period garb to show his serious academic side. "Buffalo Bill and Sitting Bull: Inventing the Wild West" is the history behind his music. This book is a must read for anyone interested in the old west and is an intriguing look into how the popular vision of it was created.


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