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By: Old scout | |
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By: Owen Wister (1860-1938) | |
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![]() These eight stories are made from our Western Frontier as it was in a past as near as yesterday and almost as by-gone as the Revolution; so swiftly do we proceed. They belong to each other in a kinship of life and manners, and a little through the nearer tie of having here and there a character in common. Thus they resemble faintly the separate parts of a whole, and gain, perhaps, something of the invaluable weight of length; and they have been received by my closest friends with suspicion. ...When... | |
![]() Lin McLean is an unaffected, attractive young cowboy in the Wyoming territory before statehood. This book is various stories in his life. | |
![]() This is the fifth published book of Owen Wister, author of the archetypical Western novel, The Virginian. Published in 1900, it comprises eight Western short stories. | |
![]() Padre Ignacio has been the pastor of California mission Santa Ysabel del Mar for twenty years. In 1855 a stranger rides into the mission bringing news and a spiritual crisis. It's really more of a novella than a novel. |
By: Paul Leicester Ford (1865-1902) | |
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![]() In this short novel the narrator is a superintendent on the K. & A. railroad, sometime in the late nineteenth century. The train is robbed somewhere in the Arizona desert. Various adventures involve this young superintendent. Romance is provided by a comely passenger. |
By: Paul S. (Paul Sylvester) Powers (1905-1971) | |
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By: Peter B. Kyne (1880-1957) | |
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By: Philip Verrill Mighels (1869-1911) | |
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By: Prentiss Ingraham (1843-1904) | |
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![]() Three different fantastic adventures of the legendary scout Buffalo Bill. |
By: Ralph Connor (1860-1937) | |
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![]() With international book sales in the millions, Ralph Connor was the best-known Canadian novelist of the first two decades of the Twentieth Century. Glengarry School Days (1902), hugely popular in its time, is based on his memories of growing up in rural Ontario around the time of Canadian confederation. Although Connor saw himself as writing moral fiction for adults, generations of younger readers have also enjoyed these affectionate and gently amusing sketches, and excerpts from Glengarry School Days have appeared in school anthologies. |
By: Randall Parrish (1858-1923) | |
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By: Rex Ellingwood Beach (1877-1949) | |
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By: Ridgwell Cullum | |
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![]() Dave ran a lumber mill in western Canada. There are some workers within his organization who he trusts implicitly, some who he doesn’t trust at all, and some who he is unsure about. But Dave is basically a trusting soul. Most of the folks in Malkern liked him, as he had been a major factor in shaping the village and in providing employment for a lot of the folks who lived in the area. Dave was not a pleasant site to look at; ungainly, not very attractive, yet he had a heart that was the antithesis of his lack of physical attractiveness... | |
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By: Robert Ames Bennet (1870-1954) | |
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By: Robert J. C. Stead (1880-1959) | |
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By: Robert Leighton (1859-1934) | |
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By: Robert Michael Ballantyne (1825-1894) | |
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![]() Charlie Brooke is always rescuing others, and sometimes even himself! His latest rescue, though, could turn out to be fatal... |
By: Roger Pocock (1865-1941) | |
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![]() This Arizona-set western at the turn of the 20th century features an Irish lord named Balshannon, his American helper Chalkeye, and a cattle-rustler's son named Curly. |
By: Roy Norton (1869-1942) | |
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By: Sidford F. (Sidford Frederick) Hamp (1855-1919) | |
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By: Spinners' Club | |
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By: Stewart Edward White (1873-1946) | |
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![]() Arizona Nights is a collection of tales from the American West as told by those who took part in them. | |
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![]() This is a well written story of the California gold rush of 1849. Four friends decide they are going to go to California and get rich in the gold fields. Follow their adventures as they travel to California across the isthmus of Panama to San Francisco. In their search for gold they encounter hostile Indians, various desperadoes, and natural disasters. Did they strike it rich? Listen and find out. | |
![]() Thirteen short stories by a popular writer of the early 20th century (not to be confused with an earlier book Blazed Trail). White's books were popular at a time when America was losing its vanishing wilderness. He was a keen observer of the beauties of nature and human nature, yet could render them in a plain-spoken style. Based on his own experience, whether writing camping journals or Westerns, he included pithy and fun details about cabin-building, canoeing, logging, gold-hunting, and guns and fishing and hunting... |
By: Vingie E. (Vingie Eve) Roe (1879-1958) | |
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By: Wilder Anthony | |
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By: Will Lillibridge (1878-1909) | |
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By: Willa Sibert Cather (1873-1947) | |
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![]() Youth And The Bright Medusa comprises eight short stories published in 1920. Four of them (The Sculptor’s Funeral; A Death In The Desert; A Wagner Matinee; Paul’s Case) are re-worked from an earlier collection, The Troll Garden, published in 1905. This Librivox recording contains in addition the three stories (Flavia And Her Artists; The Garden Lodge; The Marriage Of Phaedra) from that earlier work omitted in the later book. In other words, all the stories in both books are recorded here. |
By: William H. (William Henry) Hamby (1876-1928) | |
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By: William MacLeod Raine (1871-1954) | |
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![]() The Yukon Trail: A Tale of the North (filmed as The Grip of the Yukon in 1928) is an adventure yarn from the prodigious output of William MacLeod Raine, who averaged nearly two western novels a year for some 46 years. Twenty of his novels have been filmed. Though Raine was prolific, he was a slow, careful, conscientious worker, intent on accurate detail, and considered himself a craftsman rather than an artist. (Adapted from Wikipedia) | |
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![]() The aptly titled "Tangled Trails, A Western Detective Story" takes the listener through a web of curious incidents revolving around the murder of a prominent man in Denver. Kirby Lane was quite obviously the guilty party in the murder of his uncle. Lane, among others, had had a falling out with his uncle, the victim James Cunningham. But there were some who believed his nephew to be innocent of the hideous crime. Lane feared the guilty party to be a female bronco rider whom he had befriended, as her presence at the scene of the crime was quite evident, albeit only to him... | |
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