I have no idea why I liked this. I remember growing up in my parents' house and my dad had tonnes of Karl May's books on his shelf. Even when I was young, though, they were already regarded as naff and I would not have been seen dead with one of them. Still, recently, now much much older, Karl May crossed my radar screen for some reason and I thought I might actually read one of them, just to see what they're like.
And this one, at least, is an innocuous story, a story that transports you into a much simpler time. This feels as if somebody had observed kids playing at cowboys and Indians and written down what they saw. The story opens on an Arkansas steamboat, and the cast is the predictable mix of lone Indians, a band of thugs, silent strangers, and assorted deckhands and anonymous travellers. The thugs insult the Indians, the Indians swear revenge, a panther owned by a travelling circus-owner breaks free, general mayhem ensues, one of the Indians saves a 15 year-old girl by performing swashbuckling acrobatics, the thugs steal money from a traveller, only to be pursued by a band of honest Westerners who have come together on the ship, and so it goes on.
All written in a simple, old-fashioned style, that, for all its simplicity however, allows glimpses of solid writing talent. The plot may be simple, and the writing style seems appropriate for a young readership, but it is not poorly written. Still, I suspect I liked it, at least a little bit, for the wrong reasons. I can't resist smiling when Karl May, in the expository chapter, puts five well-known, named 'heroes' of the Wild West on a steamboat of perhaps 50 people or so. Quite a concentration of heroes...
And the writing style is just funny. "Why Sir, be you the one they call Old Firehand?" - "I am he!" - "Oh it is an honour to travel with one of the West's greatest heroes" and so on. Of course the novel is written in German, and I am not sure there is an English translation, but the slightly outmoded German sounded to me like the English I made up in my quote.
Still. It was fun. Would I pick up another one? Maybe - but I need a break. These novels have 500 pages so there's a lot of kids playing cowboys and Indians to get through.