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Louis L'Amour (1908–1988)

Author of Last of the Breed

869+ Works 99,905 Members 1,254 Reviews 105 Favorited

About the Author

Born in Jamestown, North Dakota on March 22, 1908, Louis L'Amour's adventurous life could have been the subject of one of his novels. Striking out on his own in 1923, at age 15, L'Amour began a peripatetic existence, taking whatever jobs were available, from skinning dead cattle to being a sailor. show more L'Amour knew early in life that he wanted to be a writer, and the experiences of those years serve as background for some of his later fiction. During the 1930s he published short stories and poetry; his career was interrupted by army service in World War II. After the war, L'Amour began writing for western pulp magazines and wrote several books in the Hopalong Cassidy series using the pseudonym Tex Burns. His first novel, Westward the Tide (1950), serves as an example of L'Amour's frontier fiction, for it is an action-packed adventure story containing the themes and motifs that he uses throughout his career. His fascination with history and his belief in the inevitability of manifest destiny are clear. Also present and typical of L'Amour's work are the strong, capable, beautiful heroine who is immediately attracted to the equally capable hero; a clear moral split between good and evil; reflections on the Native Americans, whose land and ways of life are being disrupted; and a happy ending. Although his work is somewhat less violent than that of other western writers, L'Amour's novels all contain their fair share of action, usually in the form of gunfights or fistfights. L'Amour's major contribution to the western genre is his attempt to create, in 40 or more books, the stories of three families whose histories intertwine as the generations advance across the American frontier. The novels of the Irish Chantry, English Sackett, and French Talon families are L'Amour's most ambitious project, and sadly were left unfinished at his death. Although L'Amour did not complete all of the novels, enough of the series exists to demonstrate his vision. L'Amour's strongest attribute is his ability to tell a compelling story; readers do not mind if the story is similar to one they have read before, for in the telling, L'Amour adds enough small twists of plot and detail to make it worth the reader's while. L'Amour fans also enjoy the bits of information he includes about everything from wilderness survival skills to finding the right person to marry. These lessons give readers the sense that they are getting their money's worth, that there is more to a L'Amour novel than sheer escapism. With over 200 million copies of his books in print worldwide, L'Amour must be counted as one of the most influential writers of westerns in this century. He died from lung cancer on June 10, 1988. (Bowker Author Biography) Louis L'Amour, truly America's favorite storyteller, was the first fiction writer ever to receive the Congressional Gold Medal from the United States Congress in honor of his life's work, & was also awarded the Medal of Freedom. There are over 260 million copies of his books in print worldwide. (Publisher Provided) show less
Image credit: Louis L'AMour, March 26, 1983

Series

Works by Louis L'Amour

Last of the Breed (1986) 1,986 copies, 32 reviews
The Haunted Mesa (1987) 1,607 copies, 26 reviews
The Walking Drum (1984) 1,581 copies, 28 reviews
Sackett's Land (1974) 1,526 copies, 34 reviews
Jubal Sackett (1985) 1,465 copies, 23 reviews
Hondo (1953) 1,457 copies, 33 reviews
To the Far Blue Mountains (1976) 1,411 copies, 14 reviews
Sackett (1961) 1,390 copies, 20 reviews
The Daybreakers (1960) 1,363 copies, 21 reviews
The Lonesome Gods (1983) 1,354 copies, 18 reviews
Education of a Wandering Man (1989) 1,323 copies, 40 reviews
The Warrior's Path (1980) 1,262 copies, 17 reviews
Ride the River (1983) 1,197 copies, 18 reviews
Flint (1960) 1,143 copies, 12 reviews
The Sackett Brand (1965) 1,134 copies, 15 reviews
Lonely on the Mountain (1980) 1,018 copies, 4 reviews
Lando (1962) 1,017 copies, 13 reviews
Mojave Crossing (1964) 990 copies, 9 reviews
Ride the Dark Trail (1972) 990 copies, 11 reviews
The Lonely Men (1969) 980 copies, 6 reviews
Mustang Man (1966) 972 copies, 12 reviews
Treasure Mountain (1972) 966 copies, 12 reviews
Comstock Lode (1981) 948 copies, 14 reviews
The Sky-Liners (1967) 931 copies, 6 reviews
Galloway (1970) 930 copies, 7 reviews
Bendigo Shafter (1979) 917 copies, 15 reviews
The Quick and the Dead (1973) 897 copies, 6 reviews
Down the Long Hills (1968) 856 copies, 15 reviews
The Cherokee Trail (1982) 850 copies, 12 reviews
Silver Canyon (1951) 836 copies, 10 reviews
The Ferguson Rifle (1973) 833 copies, 8 reviews
Sitka (1957) 830 copies, 8 reviews
The Man Called Noon (1970) 815 copies, 10 reviews
The Iron Marshall (1979) 813 copies, 11 reviews
Conagher (1969) 812 copies, 52 reviews
Reilly's Luck (1970) 808 copies, 8 reviews
The Shadow Riders: A Novel (1982) 808 copies, 8 reviews
Son of a Wanted Man (1984) 807 copies, 8 reviews
How the West was Won (1962) 804 copies, 8 reviews
Passin' Through (1985) 798 copies, 8 reviews
Fair Blows the Wind (1978) 796 copies, 13 reviews
The Man from the Broken Hills (1975) 792 copies, 7 reviews
The Californios (1974) 780 copies, 8 reviews
Borden Chantry (1977) 768 copies, 6 reviews
Guns of the Timberlands (1955) 756 copies, 11 reviews
Crossfire Trail (1954) 749 copies, 10 reviews
To Tame a Land (1955) 734 copies, 13 reviews
The Rider of Lost Creek (1976) 734 copies, 7 reviews
Bowdrie (1983) 732 copies, 11 reviews
Tucker (1971) 729 copies, 10 reviews
Milo Talon (1981) 725 copies, 6 reviews
The Mountain Valley War (1978) 723 copies, 7 reviews
The Proving Trail: A Novel (1979) 711 copies, 8 reviews
Kiowa Trail (1965) 707 copies, 4 reviews
Utah Blaine (1954) 704 copies, 6 reviews
The Broken Gun (1966) 702 copies, 7 reviews
Dark Canyon (1963) 701 copies, 6 reviews
The First Fast Draw (1959) 700 copies, 5 reviews
High Lonesome (1962) 698 copies, 13 reviews
Fallon (1963) 696 copies, 4 reviews
The Tall Stranger (1957) 695 copies, 11 reviews
The Man from Skibbereen (1973) 694 copies, 8 reviews
Showdown at Yellow Butte (1953) 691 copies, 7 reviews
Chancy (1968) 691 copies, 5 reviews
Westward the Tide (1977) 689 copies, 7 reviews
Over on the Dry Side (1975) 688 copies, 7 reviews
The Key-Lock Man (1965) 686 copies, 5 reviews
The Empty Land (1969) 685 copies, 9 reviews
Heller with a Gun (1955) 685 copies, 7 reviews
Under the Sweetwater Rim (1971) 684 copies, 6 reviews
Last Stand at Papago Wells (1957) 681 copies, 9 reviews
The Rustlers of West Fork (1979) 681 copies, 3 reviews
The Burning Hills (1956) 676 copies, 4 reviews
Hanging Woman Creek (1970) 670 copies, 8 reviews
Brionne (1968) 663 copies, 5 reviews
Matagorda (1967) 660 copies, 6 reviews
Kilkenny (1954) 658 copies, 9 reviews
End of the Drive (1997) 656 copies, 8 reviews
The High Graders (1965) 654 copies, 7 reviews
Buckskin Run (1981) 643 copies, 4 reviews
North to the Rails (1971) 642 copies, 8 reviews
Callaghen (1972) 641 copies, 5 reviews
The Outlaws of Mesquite (1990) 640 copies, 3 reviews
Radigan (1958) 632 copies, 9 reviews
Bowdrie's Law (1972) 631 copies, 8 reviews
Catlow (1962) 629 copies, 2 reviews
Shalako (1962) 629 copies, 7 reviews
Kid Rodelo (1966) 628 copies, 6 reviews
Rivers West (1975) 623 copies, 8 reviews
War Party (1975) 614 copies, 7 reviews
The Trail to Seven Pines (1951) 613 copies, 6 reviews
Where the Long Grass Blows (1976) 610 copies, 4 reviews
Taggart (1959) 602 copies, 7 reviews
Kilrone (1966) 601 copies, 3 reviews
The Strong Shall Live (1980) 582 copies, 11 reviews
Killoe (1962) 579 copies, 4 reviews
Beyond the Great Snow Mountains (1999) 576 copies, 6 reviews
Law of the Desert Born (1946) 571 copies, 4 reviews
Long Ride Home (1989) 567 copies, 11 reviews
The Riders of High Rock (1951) 556 copies, 1 review
Dutchman's Flat (1986) 552 copies, 4 reviews
West of Dodge (1996) 543 copies, 6 reviews
Monument Rock (1998) 542 copies, 3 reviews
Off the Mangrove Coast (2000) 541 copies, 4 reviews
Lonigan (1988) 521 copies, 3 reviews
The Trail to Crazy Man (1986) 520 copies, 5 reviews
Riding for the Brand (1986) 519 copies, 5 reviews
Yondering (1980) 513 copies, 11 reviews
The Rider of the Ruby Hills (1986) 506 copies, 4 reviews
May There Be a Road (2001) 502 copies, 7 reviews
Valley of the Sun (1995) 492 copies, 6 reviews
Trouble Shooter (1951) 488 copies, 4 reviews
With These Hands (2002) 465 copies, 8 reviews
The Hills of Homicide (1983) 450 copies, 8 reviews
Night Over the Solomons: Stories (1986) 404 copies, 5 reviews
West from Singapore (1987) 364 copies, 4 reviews
From the Listening Hills (2003) 326 copies, 3 reviews
Smoke from this Altar (1990) 265 copies, 5 reviews
Frontier (1984) 165 copies, 1 review
The Sixth Shotgun (1949) 158 copies, 1 review
The Sacketts Volume 1 (1980) 157 copies, 4 reviews
A Man Called Trent (1965) 151 copies, 5 reviews
West of the Tularosa (1986) 128 copies, 3 reviews
The Sacketts Volume 3 (1980) 113 copies, 3 reviews
Grub Line Rider (1951) 113 copies, 4 reviews
The Sacketts Volume 2 (1980) 111 copies, 5 reviews
The Shadow Riders [1982 TV movie] (1982) — Novel by — 107 copies
The Sacketts Volume 4 (1980) 106 copies, 4 reviews
Showdown Trail (1986) 103 copies, 1 review
The Daybreakers • Sackett (1990) 97 copies
Big Medicine (1986) 89 copies, 2 reviews
No Traveller Returns (2018) 88 copies, 3 reviews
Mistakes Can Kill You (1986) 68 copies, 2 reviews
Man Riding West (1986) 62 copies, 1 review
The Lawless West (2007) 60 copies, 2 reviews
Trailing West (2008) 57 copies, 2 reviews
Riders of the Dawn (2006) 56 copies, 1 review
Desert Death-Song (1950) 51 copies
The Sacketts Volume 5 (1986) 48 copies, 1 review
Law of the Desert Born: A Graphic Novel (2013) 47 copies, 4 reviews
Radigan [and] North to the Rails (2008) 45 copies, 1 review
Louis L'Amour Collection (7 Audiobook) (1999) 45 copies, 1 review
The Golden West (2003) 44 copies
Glory Riders (2011) 39 copies
Showdown on the Hogback (2005) 38 copies, 1 review
Shalako/Catlow (2008) 38 copies
Lone Star Law (2005) 32 copies
Lost Trails (2007) — Contributor — 30 copies
The Sacketts (1995) 29 copies, 1 review
Booty for a Bad Man (1991) 27 copies, 3 reviews
A Gun for Kilkenny (1986) 25 copies, 1 review
Home in the Valley: A Western Sextet (1986) 23 copies, 2 reviews
Lit a Shuck for Texas (1986) 21 copies
There's Always a Trail (1948) 19 copies, 1 review
Rowdy Rides to Glory (1987) 17 copies
Dead Ringer: A Western Trio (2021) 17 copies, 1 review
McQueen of the Tumbling K (1986) 16 copies
The Turkeyfeather Riders (1986) 15 copies
Sackett's Gold 13 copies
Showdown (2009) 12 copies
The Sacketts Volumes 1-5 (1980) 12 copies
Bannon (2019) 11 copies
Tales from the Old West [UNABRIDGED] (2005) 11 copies, 1 review
The Kilkenny Series Bundle (2015) 10 copies
Keep Travelin', Rider (1986) 10 copies
The Diamond of Jeru (2000) 10 copies
L'Amour: A Collection (2010) 9 copies
Down the Pogonip Trail (1949) 9 copies
Four-Card Draw (1986) 9 copies
Unguarded Moment (1983) 8 copies
No Man's Man (2000) 8 copies
Ride! You Tonto Raiders (1949) 8 copies
Bowdrie Passes Through (1983) 8 copies
A Job for a Ranger (1983) 8 copies
Louis L'Amour (1980) 7 copies
Bill Carey Rides West (1990) 7 copies
The Sacketts Volume Two 12-Book Bundle (2014) 7 copies, 1 review
A Trail to the West (1983) 7 copies
Down Sonora Way (1984) 7 copies
His Brother's Debt (1986) 6 copies
Survival (Louis L'Amour) (1999) 6 copies, 1 review
Where Buzzards Fly (1984) 5 copies
Horse Heaven (1950) 5 copies
Sackett Family (1992) 5 copies
MCNELLY KNOWS A RANGER (1984) 5 copies
The Courting of Griselda (1997) 5 copies
Strange Pursuit (1984) 5 copies
Lännen mies (1979) 5 copies
Dead Man's Trail (1983) 5 copies
Trail to Pie Town (1886) 4 copies
Két szekér arany (1988) 4 copies
The Guns Talk Loud (1947) 4 copies
L'envol De L'aigle (1988) 4 copies
Apache (1987) 4 copies
Stay Out of My Nightmare (1983) 3 copies
Le Ranch De Clive Chantry (1976) 3 copies
Tales from the Trail (2007) 3 copies
Lamour Sackett 4C Box Set (1999) 3 copies
Guns of the Timberland [1960 film] (2014) — Novel — 3 copies
Fighter's Fiasco (2002) 3 copies
La lunga fuga (1990) 3 copies
Louis L'Amour Collection (2006) 3 copies
One Last Gun Notch (1942) 3 copies
Westerns (2001) 3 copies
Shalako. (1969) 2 copies
Buckskin Run : Stories (1981) 2 copies
Rock Bannon (1980) 2 copies
One Night Stand 2 copies
Hillside Homicide (1983) 2 copies
Der Goldschatz im Berg (1977) 2 copies
Alaska (1987) 2 copies
Shandy Takes the Hook (1989) 2 copies
Squatters on the Lonetree (1952) 2 copies
Teksasin miehet tulevat (1983) 2 copies
West of Dodge (1998) 2 copies
More Brains than Bullets (1983) 2 copies
Fallon: A Novel 2 copies
Collect from a Corpse (1983) 2 copies
Trap of Gold (1951) 2 copies
Le canon de la folle (1971) 2 copies
In an Old Temple 2 copies, 1 review
West of Pilot Range (1995) 2 copies
Louis lamour 2 copies
A Strong Land Growing (1986) 2 copies
JACKSON OF HORNTOWN (1947) 2 copies
Crossfire Trail (1976) 1 copy
Lunga fuga 1 copy
℗I ℗due nemici (1986) 1 copy
Lockendes Gold. (1981) 1 copy
NOI SACKETT 1 copy
Barney Takes a Hand (1986) 1 copy
Verso i Monti Azzurri (1987) 1 copy
Bad Place to Die (1989) 1 copy
Buckskin 1 copy
Matagorda 1 copy
CATLOW 1 copy
Majave crossing (1968) 1 copy
Keep Travelin' Rider (2008) 1 copy
l'erede del bandito (1985) 1 copy
Calloway 1 copy
In Protest 1 copy
Let It Snow 1 copy
Winter Winds 1 copy
Twilight 1 copy
Tranquillity 1 copy
The Pioneer 1 copy
Picture 1 copy
Old Jerry 1 copy
Question 1 copy
Rain 1 copy
McVey 1 copy
Hildebrand 1 copy
Steppe 1 copy
Yacodhapura 1 copy
Mutation 1 copy
Wings over Khabarovsk (1986) 1 copy
The Goose Flies South (1986) 1 copy
Tailwind to Tibet (1986) 1 copy
Pirates with Wings (1986) 1 copy
Mission to Siberut (1986) 1 copy
Fuego en las Mantanas (1981) 1 copy
Riding On (1951) 1 copy
That Packsaddle Affair (1990) 1 copy
No Rest for the Wicked (1990) 1 copy
The Drift (1990) 1 copy
The Ghost Maker (1990) 1 copy
Alkali Basin 1 copy
Decadence 1 copy
Rustler Roundup (1997) 1 copy
Desperate Men (1997) 1 copy
Caprock Rancher (1997) 1 copy
A Man Named Utah 1 copy, 1 review
North Cape 1 copy
Banked Fires 1 copy
Secret Pass 1 copy
Winter 1 copy
Nocturne 1 copy
Life 1 copy
In Victorio's Country (1995) 1 copy
That Slash Seven Kid (1995) 1 copy
Gila Crossing (1995) 1 copy
No Man's Mesa (1995) 1 copy
Coast Patrol 1 copy
Glorious! 1 copy
The Admiral 1 copy
Guldfloden 1 copy
Hævnens vej 1 copy
Yksinäiset jumalat (1985) 1 copy
Paperback 1 copy
Die schnelle Hand (1959) 1 copy
Fünf Partner (1965) 1 copy
Vol. 1 - Westerns (1997) 1 copy
La Vallée verte (1983) 1 copy
Les implacables. (1971) 1 copy
Les despérados (1970) 1 copy
Les Cow-boys du B-Bar (1983) 1 copy
Le Train Du Kansas (1980) 1 copy
Le Repaire du vengeur (1983) 1 copy
La Route du Colorado (1983) 1 copy
Man Alleen 1 copy
La Longue Chasse (1981) 1 copy
La Cabane perdue (1983) 1 copy
Dans le canon du Colt (1982) 1 copy
Cyclone sur Matagorda (1983) 1 copy
Hunted Mesa 1 copy
Fortune de feu (1986) — Author — 1 copy
all works 1 copy
Black Rock (2008) 1 copy
Big Man 1 copy
Duffy's Man 1 copy
Author's Tea 1 copy
The Unexpected Corpse (2000) 1 copy
Samotář (1995) 1 copy
Psanec (2009) 1 copy
Poklad 1 copy
Osamělý jezdec (2005) 1 copy
Na mušce (2011) 1 copy
Punainen hevonen (1983) 1 copy
Tie Coloradoon (1983) 1 copy
The Last Frontier 1 copy, 1 review
Wilderness Trek (1965) 1 copy
THOH (1983) 1 copy
Time of Terror (2000) 1 copy

Associated Works

How the West Was Won [1962 film] (1962) — Original story — 223 copies, 3 reviews
The Big Book of Adventure Stories (2011) — Contributor — 137 copies, 3 reviews
The Quick and the Dead [1987 TV movie] (2003) — Original book — 131 copies
The Arbor House Treasury of Great Western Stories (1982) — Contributor — 107 copies, 1 review
The Sacketts [1979 film] (1996) — Original book — 67 copies
Great Tales of the West (1982) — Contributor — 35 copies, 1 review
Ghost Towns (2010) — Contributor — 34 copies
Shalako [1968 film] (1968) — Original book — 28 copies
The Best of the American West II (1999) — Contributor — 17 copies, 1 review
Desperadoes (2001) — Contributor — 12 copies
The Western Hall of Fame Anthology (1997) — Contributor — 11 copies
The Burning Hills [1956 film] (1956) — Orignial novel — 7 copies
Catlow [1971 film] — Original book — 3 copies

Tagged

action (199) Action/Adventure Stories (424) adventure (606) American West (342) audiobook (202) cowboys (213) Drama/Family Stories (413) fiction (6,640) goodreads (254) hardcover (211) historical (239) historical fiction (873) horses (147) L'Amour (1,169) Louis L'Amour (1,468) mmpb (648) novel (696) Old West (261) owned (255) paperback (456) PB (237) read (262) Sacketts (849) short stories (686) The Louis L'Amour Collection (453) to-read (1,710) western (16,093) Western Fiction (930) Western stories (544) Westerns (1,499)

Common Knowledge

Canonical name
L'Amour, Louis
Legal name
L'Amour, Louis Dearborn
Other names
LaMoore, Louis Dearborn (birth name)
Burns, Tex
Mayo, Jim
Birthdate
1908-03-22
Date of death
1988-06-10
Gender
male
Education
self-educated
Occupations
novelist
gold miner
merchant seaman
professional boxer
Organizations
WPA Writers Project
Awards and honors
Presidential Medal of Freedom (1984)
Congressional Gold Medal (1982)
Theodore Roosevelt Roughrider Award (1972)
Saddleman Award (1981)
National Book Award (1979)
Relationships
L'Amour, Angelique (daughter)
L'Amour, Beau (son)
Short biography
Louis Dearborn L'Amour (March 22, 1908 – June 10, 1988) was an American novelist and short-story writer. His books consisted primarily of Western novels; however, he also wrote historical fiction, science fiction, non-fiction, as well as poetry and short-story collections. Many of his stories were made into films.

Louis Dearborn L'Amour was born in Jamestown, North Dakota, in 1908. He left home at the age of fifteen and enjoyed a wide variety of jobs. In 1983 Mr. L'Amour became the first novelist to ever to be awarded the Congressional Gold Medal by the United States Congress in honor of his life's work. In 1984 he was also awarded the Medal of Freedom by President Reagan.

Louis L'Amour died on June 10, 1988.
Cause of death
cancer (lung)
Nationality
USA
Birthplace
Jamestown, North Dakota, USA
Places of residence
Los Angeles, California, USA
Place of death
Los Angeles, California, USA
Burial location
Forest Lawn Memorial Park Cemetery, Glendale, California, USA
Map Location
North Dakota, USA

Members

Discussions

Louis L'Amour 2022 Shared Read Challenge in 75 Books Challenge for 2022 (January 2023)
Louis L'Amour in Westerns (March 2012)

Reviews

1,284 reviews
A relatively short novel about William Tell Sackett, older brother of Orrin and Tyrel from The Daybreakers. Tell is bigger-than-life, and twice as sturdy. On his way to New Mexico to find his brothers, after a cattle drive in Montana, he happens on a starving young woman in a cave that also happens to hold a hella stash of easy-to-get-at goooooold that she and her grandfather were looking for with the help of a very old Spanish map. So Tell rescues her, dispatching some bad dudes who have show more been hunting for him for a while, and sets out to get as much gold out of the mountain as possible before winter makes it impossible to get there or----wait for it----get OUT again. Tell wants to settle down, and hopes maybe this girl is for him, but even after he's played the hero card, she won't be easy to convince. I enjoyed this slightly outlandish tale of adventure in the High Lonesome, and I sincerely hope Tell gets what he wants. He earned it. show less
½
As a new fan of western literature (and media in general) I was so, so excited to start reading Louis L'Amour. So all fools me I accidentally chose the singular NON Western book. And one of his Lost Treasures too.
As a result, this review may be entirely unfair. I'm rating what may be an unfinished book, script or just a stitched together collection of notes.

I did not like this book one bit.
I never Enjoy being harsh on books but this one took effort to avoid a DNF.

Every other page, if not show more every other page, has an obnoxious amount of MC questions. 'What do they mean by evil?' 'What is Eric doing?'. Not just are these questions repeated, but actual lines. Within one page I saw the exact same dialogue repeated in very minutely different ways.
It got exhausting. I genuinely found myself rolling my eyes.

There are a ridiculous amount of contradictions. Mike saying he didn't have any friends on one page yet another he gets many letters from friends. A man approaching and saying he is not a man of many words, and yet has 3 pages of dialogue.
And then the convenient plot advancements... Such as when a lady who was taken by guards appears immediately after being mentioned for the first time. Then doesn't explain why she's there. How she escaped or why.
The main character escapes the main climax after being knocked out and his friends explain his dog came through and saved him. After at least 50 pages of figuring how to resolve said conflict.

Plots are left unresolved. Like Kawasis village. Or the archivist.

My main gripe though is how flat the characters felt. For the first 200 pages Mike does nothing but go to and from the mesa, repeating over and over things that the readers know. Mike himself is skilled at most everything, and so there were no stakes. I knew he was going to get through everything! He never faced any conflict himself. No difficulty. He acted like he knew more about the people in the Third Dimension than they did themselves. And this wasnt contested. There was no explanation as to how he felt.

His reuniting with Erik (the main plot might I add) was lackluster. Neither seemed particularly glad to meet each other again and though Erik was starving, Mike did nothing to help this. He even goes on ahead.
Dialogue is stilted and every character has the same voice. There is zero emotion- just action. And even then, 200 pages of debating?

I struggled. I really did. I really really really wanted to like this book. I finished it even so I could give it a fair shot. If you want to read Louis L'Amour. Please don't read this one. Find one of his westerns. Which I'm about to do now.
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I liked the survival bits of this, though L'Amour is often frustratingly vague about how much time has passed between one scene and the next. Instead of knowing how a task is accomplished, we know only that it has been done.

I even enjoyed the cat and mouse chase, at least at the beginning. As the book went on, everything got more and more repetitive: the survival techniques, the chase, and especially the writing. Over and over again, we're told, "No one could survive out there!" and "Alekhin show more would catch the American and kill him!" and "Natalya stared into the distance, wondering if he was still alive," and "The past few months had made Joe lean and strong," and worst of all, "Joe was reverting to a savage Indian."

I understand L'Amour was writing after centuries of negative, and inaccurate, propaganda from the US government about native peoples, but even when I tried to make allowances for that, the constant harping on Joe's true self being "savage" and "uncivilized" was extremely tiresome. Joe, you see, is a special snowflake of a Red Indian. He, and he alone, is the only remaining Indian with a crude and primitive code of honor. He, and he alone, is the only one capable of waging so personal a war against his oppressors.

I know this type of book is intended to feed a fantasy of self-reliance and moral superiority, but I just don't have a lot of patience for anyone who truly believes that they are the last of a breed. Especially when being the last of a breed allows someone carte blanche to behave however they wish, all ties to humanity irrelevant because they are somehow apart from everyone around them.

Every single person is special. Every single person is unique. And every single person has to figure out how to accept that they are not any more special or unique than any other person. Joe is highly competent—most of the time—but his war is not holy. His "savage" inner self is not righteous. (Or Indian, for that matter.) And if he had any idea how much his pragmatic ruthlessness had in common with his antagonists', he might rethink his conviction that he is the last of his breed.
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“I think of myself in the oral tradition--as a troubadour, a village taleteller, the man in the shadows of the campfire. That’s the way I’d like to be remembered--as a storyteller. A good storyteller.” -Louis L’Amour
Well, Mr. L’Amour, that’s how I remember you. Every time I’ve picked up one of your books, I knew I was gonna get a good story--another time, another place to give me a break from my own little world. I wasn’t let down with this one, either. Some reviewers see show more this novel as a bit of a mediocre offering from you, and it may be, but I figure that a mediocre book by Louis L’Amour is better than most everyone else’s. We ride on. show less

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Statistics

Works
869
Also by
14
Members
99,905
Popularity
#91
Rating
3.8
Reviews
1,254
ISBNs
3,364
Languages
22
Favorited
105

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