Louis Dearborn L'Amour was an American novelist and short story writer. His books consisted primarily of Western novels, though he called his work "frontier stories". His most widely known Western fiction works include Last of the Breed, Hondo, Shalako, and the Sackett series. L'Amour also wrote historical fiction (The Walking Drum), science fiction (The Haunted Mesa), non-fiction (Frontier), and poetry and short-story collections. Many of his stories were made into films. His books remain popular and most have gone through multiple printings. At the time of his death, almost all of his 105 existing works (89 novels, 14 short-story collections, and two full-length works of nonfiction) were still in print, and he was "one of the world's most popular writers".
Three very good short stories. I have really enjoyed Louis l’Amour’s characters and descriptions of the old west territories. He is an author worth every bit spending time with.
Another audio book from the library & candy read. Good readers, a handful of unmemorable short stories. I should probably also add them to the romance shelf. L'Amour loves to get the hero together with some female even if they've only shared a single conversation in the few hours they've known each other or possibly mooned at each other from afar. Kind of silly. Still, he describes the country well & there's always a lot of action. Missing a paragraph or two doesn't hurt much, so it's great listening while working.
Good and solid prose in an English that can be understood by all. The fourth star goes to Mark Bramhall who's excellent narration took me inside the stories. As I constantly tell my relatives that are not Americans, stop listening to the current American culture to know how English should be spoken. Read and listen to works from the past. The poorly spoken language that was once found outside our schools and media has now become the norm. i.e. "uptalk" "endspeak" drive me up the wall and reinforce Curtis Mayfield's accurate observation of fifty years ago "educated fools from uneducated schools".
West of the Tularosa – Purchasing land in a new area can be dangerous. Ward McQueen, manager of the Firebox was overseeing the purchase of a ranch with controlling water that was wanted by Webb of the Rocking-W, a big local rancher. The Rocking-W employed several gunfighters. McQueen and the Tumbling-K Segundo, Kim Sartain were “fast hands” as well. All this spelled coming trouble; gun trouble. This is a pretty good who-done-it, strong characters with plenty of action. Home in the Valley – Steve Mehan was on a mission; a dangerous mission. The ranches of his wife’s father and grandfather, along with three others, were about to be forfeited. Notes were due to a man named Hittson, cash was scarce and time was running out. Mehan devised a desperate plan to get the needed money. It worked and Mehan deposited the money in a Sacramento bank. Fate had other plans though. It was 99% sure that Mehan’s money was lost. Mehan was not one to give up, devising another seemingly impossible plan, banking on that one percent. This is an inspiring fast-paced story about determination and loyalty. I liked it. West Is Where the Heart Is – Jim London survives a wagon train attack with just the shirt on his back. So does a five-year-old girl. I think the little girl brings Jim good luck as they are soon on their way. Jim doggedly headed for home and his wife, being away nearly five years due to the war and travel. People he met warned him that five years was a long time but Jim was confident and determined. The optimistic tale continues, as they journey through Indian and bandit territory to get home. It’s a fine short story of hope and love.
In “West of the Tularosa,” some shading dealing and at one least on murder puts the ownership of a ranch in jeopardy. In “Home in the Valley,” a bank failure will cause five ranchers to lose everything, unless one determined rancher can get to the bank branch to withdraw the money before the steamer ship gets there with the news. In “West is Where the Heart Is,” a man is gone four years in the Civil War when he only expected to be gone four months. On his way home, he discovers burned out a burned out wagon train and a lone survivor, a little girl. And he is fearful of what he will find when he eventually makes it home. These three short stories are very entertaining and they evoke the dangers and hardships of the Wild West quite well.
I’ve been on Louis L’Amour reading kick lately, and this one broke away a bit from the formulaic writing of some of the other collections of his I’d taken on.
Only one of these used L’Amour’s overused plot device of having a slim hipped broad shouldered hero fistfight and gunfight his way to justice while battling a vicious land grabbing local power broker and his evil minions. But this story had the appeal of a murder mystery. Another was a tale of endurance, and the last a tale of survival and devotion.
ThIs was a pretty enjoyable collection. Not nearly as old-fashioned and corny as some of his earlier works…. which are still enjoyable, but badly dated.
These are familiar Louis L'Amour short stories/novelettes read by professionals. I had read or listened to all of them before, but enjoyed revisiting these stories of men and women of the old west. L'Amour's heroes always appeal to me because they are men of undoubted confidence and ability. I wish I could be so unfailingly competent and knowledgeable, always doing exactly the right thing in difficult circumstances. These stories are fun.
Three entertaining stories. The first story had a bit of an odd ending, loved the second tale of the race against the steamboat, and found the ending to the last story to be very touching
This has three short stories. The first one is a revisit with Ward McQueen. It was better than the first one with that character. The other two were also typical Westerns. Good stuff.