The Personal Narrative of James O. Pattie: the Adventures of a Young Man in the Southwest and California in the 1830s - Richard Batman - Böcker - Wordworx Publishing - 9780692438817 - 6 juni 2015
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The Personal Narrative of James O. Pattie: the Adventures of a Young Man in the Southwest and California in the 1830s

Richard Batman

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Fr. 17,99

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Förväntad leverans 11 - 21 jun
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The Personal Narrative of James O. Pattie: the Adventures of a Young Man in the Southwest and California in the 1830s

Publisher Marketing: This is the autobiography of a man who traveled through early California and the Southwest in the 1800's. How did we find the story of James O. Pattie? Through a remarkable stroke of luck. An anonymous traveler passed through Cincinnati one day in 1830, and the local newspaper carried a story about him. The man was identified only as "a passenger who arrived yesterday from Vera Cruz," and the story contained a few of the man's vague, political comments about Mexico. Had they taken the time to interview him, his stories would have filled an entire newspaper. His name was James O. Pattie, and he had just returned from wandering in the almost unknown territory between the Mississippi River and the Pacific Ocean. But, at a bookstore on Main Street, the owner Timothy Flint, was interested in Pattie's stories. Flint, once a missionary and minister, had given up religion in favor of writing, editing, and bookselling. By 1830 Flint was a well-known author, and he was particularly interested in the West. Josiah Johnston, the US senator from Louisiana, shared that interest and he had arrived in Cincinnati just the day before. One month before landing in Cincinnati, Pattie was on his way home from California by way of Mexico. He was so broke that he couldn't keep going upriver to Kentucky. Senator Johnston heard of Pattie's trouble, and offered to pay his fare on the same steamboat he was taking to Cincinnati. Once there, the senator introduced young Mr. Pattie to the bookstore owner and writer, Timothy Flint. Pattie sailed back home to Augusta, Kentucky, but one year later he went back to Cincinnati and the bookstore. Work began on this narrative, and was published one year later. Here you have the first-hand account of a daring and brash young man who set off into the unknown and brought back a treasure chest of tales. Enjoy! General Editor of Mountain Man Classics, Win Blevins, has received the Owen Wister Award for lifetime achievement in writing about the West. He has also been inducted into the Western Writer's Hall of Fame. "Win Blevins has long since won his place among the West's very best." Tony Hillerman on 'Give Your Heart to the Hawks.' "Blevins possesses a rare skill in masterfully telling a story to paper. He is a true storyteller in the tradition of Naive people." Lee Francis, Native American Studies, UNM "Blevins shows us the glory years of frontier life, fresh and rich." Kirkus Reviews on a book from Win's Rendezvous Series, 'Beauty for Ashes' "One of the finest novels to come out of the American West in a long time. An amazing book, grandly conceived and beautifully written." Dallas Morning News on 'Stone Song, The Story of Crazy Horse.'" Contributor Bio:  Blevins, Win "I came naturally by my yen to wander far places, physical, imaginary, and spiritual..."-"Win Blevins" Win Blevins, of Cherokee, Irish and Welsh descent, is from a family that was on the move, always west. Win's childhood was spent roaming, his dad a railroad man. Win went to school in St. Louis, and the family spent summers in little towns along the tracks of the railroads. He listened to the whistles blow at night and wanted to go wherever the trains went. Seldom has a young man been in more of a hurry. Using scholarships, Win ran through a succession of colleges, receiving his master's degree, with honors, in English from Columbia University. He taught at Purdue University and Franklin College, then received a fellowship to attend USC. Win became a newspaperman - a music, theater, and film critic for both major Los Angeles papers. In 1972 he took the big leap-he quit his job to write out his passions-exploring and learning wild places-full time. His greatest passion of all has been to set the stories of these places, their people and animals, colors and smells, into books. Win climbed mountains for ten years. A fluke blizzard caught him on a mountaintop and froze his feet, an end to climbing mountains, but not to exploring them. He's rafted rivers in the west, particularly the Snake and the San Juan, and was briefly a river guide. His love of the great Yellowstone River gave him a fine appreciation for the people who first loved these wild places. Along the way, Win lost the use of his legs and learned to sail, deciding a boat was a good place for a man without legs. He regained the use of his legs, and maintains his love of the open seas. His first book, "Give Your Heart to the Hawks", is still in print after thirty years. Other works include "Stone Song", a novel about Crazy Horse, for which he won the 1996 Mountains and Plains Booksellers Award and the 1996 Spur Award. He's written 15 books, including a Dictionary of the American West, numerous screenplays and magazine articles. He lives quietly in the canyon country of Utah. His passions grow with time-his wife Meredith, the center of his life, their five kids and grandkids. Classical music, baseball, roaming red rock mesas in the astonishing countryside, playing music He considers himself blessed to be one of the people creating new stories about the west, and is proud to call himself a member of the world's oldest profession-storyteller.

Media Böcker     Pocketbok   (Bok med mjukt omslag och limmad rygg)
Releasedatum 6 juni 2015
ISBN13 9780692438817
Utgivare Wordworx Publishing
Antal sidor 274
Mått 152 × 229 × 16 mm   ·   403 g