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Richard S. Wheeler (1) (1935–2019)

Author of Eclipse: A Novel of Lewis and Clark

For other authors named Richard S. Wheeler, see the disambiguation page.

84 Works 1,215 Members 22 Reviews 1 Favorited

About the Author

Richard S. (Shaw) Wheeler was born in Milwaukee in 1935 and grew up in nearby Wauwatosa. Wheeler spent three years in Hollywood in the mid-50s, where he worked in a record store and took acting lessons while struggling as a screenwriter. He eventually returned home, and attended the University of show more Wisconsin at Madison. He spent over a decade as a newspaperman, working as an editorial writer for the Phoenix Gazette, editorial page editor for the Oakland, California, Tribune, reporter on the Nevada Appeal in Carson City, and reporter and assistant city editor for the Billings, Montana, Gazette. In 1972, he turned to book editing, working in all for four publishers through 1987. As an editor for Walker & Company he edited twelve Western novels a year. Sandwiched between editing stints, in the mid-70s he worked at the Rancho de la Osa dude ranch in Sasabe, Arizona, on the Mexican border. There, in the off season, he experimented with his own fiction and wrote his first novel, Bushwack, published by Doubleday in 1978. Five more Western novels followed Bushwack before Wheeler was able to turn to writing full time: Beneath the Blue Mountain (1979), Winter Grass (1983), Sam Hook (1986), Richard Lamb (1987) and Dodging Red Cloud (1987). (Bowker Author Biography) show less
Image credit: http://www.richardswheeler.com/ - Author's official web site

Series

Works by Richard S. Wheeler

Masterson (1999) 40 copies
Sierra (1996) 39 copies
Snowbound (2010) 32 copies
The Buffalo Commons (1998) 32 copies
The Far Tribes (1990) 31 copies
Aftershocks (1999) 27 copies
The Two Medicine River (1993) 26 copies
Canyon of Bones (2007) 25 copies
The Exile (2003) 24 copies
Sun River (1989) 23 copies
Skye's West: Bannack (1989) 23 copies
The Richest Hill on Earth (2011) 19 copies
Badlands (1992) 19 copies
Restitution (2001) 18 copies
Flint's Honor (1999) 17 copies
The Fields of Eden (2001) 17 copies
Wind River (1797) 17 copies
The Deliverance (2003) 17 copies
Second Lives (1997) 17 copies
Sun Dance (1992) 15 copies
An Obituary for Major Reno (2005) 15 copies
Vengeance Valley (2004) 14 copies
Trouble in Tombstone (2004) 14 copies
Pagans in the pulpit (1974) 14 copies
Winter Grass (1983) 14 copies
Cashbox (1994) 14 copies
Where The River Runs (1990) 13 copies
The Final Tally (1990) 13 copies
The Rocky Mountain Company (1991) 12 copies
Bitterroot: Skye's West (1991) 12 copies
Incident at Fort Keogh (1990) 12 copies
Flint's Truth (1998) 12 copies
Seven Miles To Sundown (2005) 11 copies
The Fate (1992) 11 copies
Anything Goes: A Novel (2015) 11 copies
Yellowstone (Skye's West) (1990) 11 copies
Deuces and Ladies Wild (1991) 10 copies
The Witness (2000) 10 copies
Montana Hitch (1990) 10 copies
Richard Lamb (1987) 10 copies
Fool's Coach (1989) 9 copies
Goldfield (1995) 8 copies
From Hell To Midnight (2006) 8 copies
Stop (1988) 7 copies
Drum's Ring (2001) 7 copies
Easy Pickings: A Novel (2016) 6 copies
Dodging Red Cloud (1988) 6 copies
The children of darkness (1973) 6 copies
Easy Street (2012) 6 copies
Sam Hook (1986) 6 copies
Bushwack (1978) 5 copies
The Bounty Trail (2004) 4 copies
Beneath the blue mountain (1979) 4 copies
Brass in the Desert (2016) 3 copies

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Reviews

 
Flagged
BooksInMirror | 1 other review | Feb 19, 2024 |
Good western novel about a struggle in the later fur trapping days after beavers have "played out." Relationship between a mountain man and his "medicine woman" Cheyenne wife. From point of view of several characters.
 
Flagged
kslade | Dec 8, 2022 |
“Easy Street” (2012), one of Richard S. Wheeler's last novels, did not have a major publisher. As no publisher at all is listed on the book, it must have been self-published. To be sure, it is not among his best westerns, yet still it proves entertaining while, like his others, giving readers a glimpse at the real Wild West as opposed to the popular fantasy.

The story begins, and ends, in the East, where Jay Tecumseh Warren, son of a wealthy businessman, has just graduated from Harvard expecting to live comfortably off his father's money for the rest of his life. Instead when he gets home he finds $500, a train ticket to Cheyenne, Wyoming, and a letter from his father telling him to make his own way in the world.

In Cheyenne — although with $500 he could have gone anywhere — Jay, having a Harvard degree, expects to start at the top. The only available jobs, however, are those requiring hard physical labor, which Jay decides is beneath him. He changes his mind, somewhat, when his money runs out. He takes a job with a shipping company hauling supplies by oxen for gold miners in Deadwood. He abandons that job as soon as he can, joining a gang of men planning to jump the claims of miners.

One get-rich scheme after another, legal or not, fails to put Jay on Easy Street, until in the final chapters he finally learns the lesson his father had been trying to teach him — that hard work leads to success. Nothing comes easy.

It may all be a bit simplistic, yet even in his old age Wheeler could write an engaging novel. “Easy Street” at least deserved a publisher.
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Flagged
hardlyhardy | Mar 17, 2022 |
Right up to the end of his prolific career, Richard S. Wheeler wrote western novels that didn't seem like western novels. They were more about the real West than the fantasy West. His 2015 novel (he died in 2019), “Anything Goes,” must be one of those least like a typical western novel. Not among his best, it nevertheless offers a rich reading experience.

The West has been all but tamed early in the 20th century when a small vaudeville troupe braves harsh winter weather to bring entertainment to towns in the upper Rockies. The Beausoleil Brothers Follies is run by August Beausoleil, who has no brother and has put together a variety show composed of singers, dancers, comics, an animal act and a juggler. The show barely breaks even, but keeps going and usually finds an audience starved for entertainment.

Then troubles come, one after the other. The lead singer dies. One of the monkeys in the animal act dies because of the cold weather. Several of the performers get sick. Then the Orpheum Circuit, which has taken over the best theaters in the East, starts doing the same in the West, spelling doom for this independent group of performers. Prominent theaters begin canceling August's bookings.

Then there's Ginger, an 18-year-old girl who has run away from home, or more specifically, from her dominating mother who wants her to become an opera star. Ginger, who has also changed her name, has other ideas. She joins the Follies and soon becomes its star, but then forced changes in the schedule take her unwillingly back to her hometown in Idaho.

Wheeler's story may be weaker than usual, but his characters are vivid and memorable. Show business novels usually turn me off, but not this one.
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Flagged
hardlyhardy | Sep 16, 2021 |

Awards

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Associated Authors

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C.K. Shaw Narrator

Statistics

Works
84
Members
1,215
Popularity
#21,127
Rating
½ 3.7
Reviews
22
ISBNs
356
Favorited
1

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