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When the ranch falls on hard times, Slim the cowboy decides to hit the road in search of a new job and inadvertently takes Hank and Drover with him.Tags
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In Slim's Good-bye, Slim decides to seek work in Alpine because the cattle market isn't doing well and he doesn't want to be a burden to the Lopers. Hank assumes that Slim is just going into town, so he and Drover leap into the back of Slim's rattletrap pickup.
They get as far as Canadian, Texas, before a policeman stops Slim for several legal problems with his truck. Naturally, Hank first assumes they're in Canada and succeeds in thoroughly confusing Drover before he realizes his mistake (not that he wants to admit to making a mistake).
Slim finds some temporary work for a local man. It's hardly a dream job, and the place where he'll be staying is much smaller than the hired hand house he lived in on the Loper ranch. On the bright side, show more it's cleaner. I enjoyed the method the dogs used to keep from being forced to sleep outside. It is snowing, after all.
Hank has an encounter with a horse named Bill that reinforces his dislike of horses. (Guess who was at fault...) Still, the earlier chapter called 'I Play Mind Games With the Cat' was more fun. Pete and Hank have more history.
Enjoy the scenario Hank comes up with when Slim uses that old phrase about visiting Mrs. Murphy. I sure did.
Slim doesn't know how he'll get those hitchhiking dogs back to Loper, but Mr. Erickson does.
Notes:
The first song, 'We're Freezing Our Tails,' is in chapter nine, which is also where we learn that Slim reads Ben K. Greene books.
The second song, 'Song of the Road,' is in chapter twelve.
Chapter twelve is also where you'll find an illustration of Slim and dogs in the truck as they pass a road sign stating, 'Wolf Creek 37' and 'Adobe Walls 58'.
There are no reader activity pages at the end, just an excerpt from The Case of the Saddle House Robbery. show less
They get as far as Canadian, Texas, before a policeman stops Slim for several legal problems with his truck. Naturally, Hank first assumes they're in Canada and succeeds in thoroughly confusing Drover before he realizes his mistake (not that he wants to admit to making a mistake).
Slim finds some temporary work for a local man. It's hardly a dream job, and the place where he'll be staying is much smaller than the hired hand house he lived in on the Loper ranch. On the bright side, show more it's cleaner. I enjoyed the method the dogs used to keep from being forced to sleep outside. It is snowing, after all.
Hank has an encounter with a horse named Bill that reinforces his dislike of horses. (Guess who was at fault...) Still, the earlier chapter called 'I Play Mind Games With the Cat' was more fun. Pete and Hank have more history.
Enjoy the scenario Hank comes up with when Slim uses that old phrase about visiting Mrs. Murphy. I sure did.
Slim doesn't know how he'll get those hitchhiking dogs back to Loper, but Mr. Erickson does.
Notes:
The first song, 'We're Freezing Our Tails,' is in chapter nine, which is also where we learn that Slim reads Ben K. Greene books.
The second song, 'Song of the Road,' is in chapter twelve.
Chapter twelve is also where you'll find an illustration of Slim and dogs in the truck as they pass a road sign stating, 'Wolf Creek 37' and 'Adobe Walls 58'.
There are no reader activity pages at the end, just an excerpt from The Case of the Saddle House Robbery. show less
great book! it's funny but sad.
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Author Information

168 Works 16,362 Members
John Richard Erickson was born in Midland, Texas on October 20, 1943. In 1966, he received a B.A. degree from the University of Texas in Austin and studied for two years at Harvard Divinity School. He began to publish short stories while working full-time as a cowboy, farmhand, and ranch manager. In 1982, he started his own publishing company show more called Maverick Books, which published the first Hank the Cowdog book in 1983. He is the author of the best-selling Hank the Cowdog series, which won an Audie for Outstanding Children's Series from the Audio Publisher's Association in 1993. His stories have also won Oppenheimer, Wrangler, and Lamplighter Awards. (Bowker Author Biography) show less
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Common Knowledge
- Canonical title
- Slim's Good-Bye
- People/Characters
- Hank the Cowdog (Head of Ranch Security); Drover (dog, Hank's little assistant); Slim Chance (a cowboy who works for the Lopers); High Loper (ranch owner); Sally May Loper (High's wife); Little Alfred Loper (pronounced 'Alferd,' middle name 'Leroy,' Sally May and High's son) (show all 8); Leonard (owner, Leonard's Saddle Shop); Billy (Leonard's horse)
- Important places
- Lopers' Ranch, Ochiltree County, Texas, USA; Canadian, Texas, USA; Leonard's Saddle Shop, Canadian, Texas, USA
Classifications
- Genres
- Kids, Fiction and Literature, Children's Books
- DDC/MDS
- 813.54 — Literature & rhetoric American literature in English American fiction in English 1900-1999 1945-1999
- LCC
- PZ7 .E72556 .S — Language and Literature Fiction and juvenile belles lettres Fiction and juvenile belles lettres Juvenile belles lettres
- BISAC
Statistics
- Members
- 177
- Popularity
- 181,320
- Reviews
- 2
- Rating
- (3.86)
- Languages
- English
- Media
- Paper, Audiobook, Ebook
- ISBNs
- 19
- ASINs
- 3




























































