I finished this book a few days ago and already I'm forgetting it, so it only gets three stars even though I remember having fun reading it. The title says it all though. Only there isn't one covered wagon there are a whole bunch of them, and they all gather together, and they all head west together, and they all fight and argue and eventually split up or die or kill someone. That's most of the story. I read it because I came across the 1923 silent movie based on the book. The big mystery is how I came across a 1923 silent movie, I just can't remember. But realizing it was from a book I went on a search, found the book and read it before I watched the movie. I always read a book before I watch the movie if I can. It wasn't a bad movie and it wasn't a bad book, although if these people want my advise they would have a much better trip if they would stop fighting each other over every thing, big or little. How they managed to fight the Indians and win is beyond me. I also read this about the author:
His other notable works included Story of the Cowboy, "which received a high recommendation from President Theodore Roosevelt," Way of the West, Singing Mouse Stories, and The Passing of the Frontier. Among his historical novels, The Magnificent Adventure in 1916 was set at the time of the Louisiana Purchase and the Lewis and Clark Expedition and told, said one reviewer, "a good stirring tale."
I never heard of any of them. But I never heard of this either until the movie entered my life. Then there is this:
Reviewers noted the political nature of Hough's Western fiction. One reviewer wrote that Hough's work is "not a novel at all; it is an arraignment; it is propaganda" for progressive Republicans or the Democrats. Hough "makes his point, and hammers it hard. He leaves nothing for the reader to guess....He goes at it all with bludgeon and battle-ax....He has, as a fighter, a strong style. His book is well worth reading. But it is not art."
I hate to break it to the reviewers but I never noticed the political propaganda, considering what we've been going through these last few months I never would have read the book if I had read the reviewers comments first. But if it was political it went over my head and I'm glad it did. That's all I can think of to say about it. It was easy to read, it was fun to read, and I'm glad I read it. I won't read it again though, now that the political stuff is in my head I know I'd be looking for it, and I really don't want to. Happy reading. :-)