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Good Books?

Some of my favorites are:

Dakota Cowboy by Ike Blasingame

Log of a Cowboy by Andy Adams

Forty Years' Gatherin's by Spike Van Cleve

A Day Late and a Dollar Short by Spike Van Cleve

Lone Cowboy by Will James

Smokey by Will James

Pinnacle Jake by Nellie Snyder Yost (the story of her dad)

No Time On My Hands by Nellie Snyder Yost (the story of her mother)

The Annie Cook Story by Nellie Snyder Yost

The Trading Trapping Wandering Cowboy by Ed L. Smith

Two in the Far North by Margaret Murie

Any books about bush pilots in the far north

Just about any autobiography written by old cowboys
 
Big Muddy rancher said:
Soapweed was Pinnacle Jake written about your area?
My sister brought me that book almost 40 years ago.

Albert Benton Snyder was born in Nebraska in 1872, but he cowboyed also in South Dakota, Wyoming, and Montana. He once rode a broncy horse that always would run away to the top of the nearest hill. About the third or fourth time this happened, the cowboys started calling him "Pinnacle Jake." The name stuck.

In the original hard-booked first edition book, there is a picture of the McGaughey family who worked at an Ames, Nebraska, feedlot, owned at the time by the 101 Ranch of western Nebraska and Wyoming. Peach Blossom's step-father was one of the McGaughey children, but he was born after the photo was taken, when the family had moved farther west.
 
Ben K. Green-He wrote "Horse Tradeing" and others.He was a Vet in west Texas.
Jim Butcher-"Dresdan Files"
S.M.Sterling-Alternitave time line(What happens when now knowlage is then ) Poor explanition,at best :???:
Some of John Ringos books,don't recomend all of them-some are very good.
Any Margeret Henry(King of the Wind)
C.J.Box
 
angie said:
I need someone to recommend to me a GOOD book @ Civil War. Non Fiction, for an adult.

General Stand Watie's Confederate Indians: Confederate Indians (Paperback) by Frank Cunningham.

A review from Amazon

History has told you a lot of lies......., August 15, 2007
By Robert C. Hufford (Hopewell, VA USA)
....one of the worst of which is that the Confederacy was a white, Anglo-Saxon monolith. The truth is that the Confederacy pioneered the idea of giving blacks and women positions of authority [the Matron Law], placed Jews in positions of power, and put General's stars on a Mexican. And, we had the first American Indian General; this wonderful book is his story.

Stand Watie was born in Georgia in 1806, and went west on the Trail of Tears. In Oklahoma, he became a rich, powerful, slave-owning rancher. [Yes, Indians owned slaves; so did Jews, Mexicans, and, surprise, Blacks]. He also gained both friends and enemies; as one of the two rival Principal Chiefs of the Cherokee Nations, he headed the Mixed Blood faction, which some thought got along a little too well with the government. [The other Chief, John Ross, was also a rich slave-owning rancher, living in a mansion, married to a white woman; he had less Indian blood than Watie]. Sort of like the Pure Bloods and the Mud-Bloods in the Harry Potter stories, only this wasn't funny........

When the Civil War came, both sides wanted the Indians of the Five Civilized Tribes in present day Oklahoma; enter another of the few Civil War characters who provide a measure of comic relief, Brigadier General Albert Pike, sent by the Confederacy to recruit the Indians; he did a pretty good job, too, capitalizing on the very real beef that the Indians had with the US. Pike's Civil War career is a minor footnote to a long, productive life. Today, he is best known as the philosopher of Scottish Rite Masonry. Pike resigned in late 1862 [Maybe---another topic], and was replaced by the more conventional, but less colorful, Douglas Cooper. Cooper said that Pike was either disloyal to the Confederacy, or was insane; Masons know which was the case.....

Oklahoma saw action all thru the war; the battles aren't as well known as the eastern ones, but the troops gave just as much, and the dead were just as dead. Stand Watie was a hero of Wilson's Creek, and proved to be an effective leader the whole way. Indeed, this was a theatre of operations where the Confederacy remained viable right to the end. Stand Watie was rewarded with General's stars in 1864, and was the very last Confederate General to stack arms.

This book is a true classic, a well written account of a part of the Civil War that most people don't even know existed.. Many thanks to Mr. Cunningham, and many thanks to the University of Oklahoma Press for making it available.
 
I remember reading S.E.Hintons books like "The Outsiders" and "Rumble Fish" when I was in junior high...I like to read bio's now but my favorite book of all time was called "A Good Walk Spoiled" by:john feinstein.If you like good sports stories google his books...If your a golfer you will enjoy reading his stories as he travels through out the PGA....I also suggest trying your hand at a few classic novels...It will help you to understand classical writing and you will have to read some in school soon anyways...Moby dick is a good start...and if you can read and understand John stienbeck's novel "The Grapes Of Wrath".then you did better than I did my first time through it...lol...I am told by friends who get his stuff that Shakespears plays are alot of fun to read......I dont even like to watch his plays little lone read them...but in hind site i wish i did read more classical novels and plays....
 
harris and me so awesome its about this one kid whos parents died and he has to live with his cuzin harris and they get in all kinds o trouble



it kinda relates to me and my brother.... 8) 8)
 
Old Jules
Slogum House
Comanche Moon
All Creatures Great and Small and for that matter the entire James Herriot collection.
Lovely Bones
Happy Endings, Tales of a Meaty Breasted Zilch by "Liiill Jimmy Norton
 
We have the James Herriot books on CDs. They are wonderful to listen to while on road trips. They are the one thing we all can agree to listen to and to enjoy. :wink: Otherwise, sometimes there are clashes on the type of music that is playing. :? :roll: :-)
 
Angus Cattle Shower said:
Thanks for the suggestions. Currently in class I am reading the notes I get passed. :lol:

My favorite book of all time would probably have to be the Yearling. I forget who writes it, but it is definitely hands down the best book ever written, IMHO.

marjorie keenan rawlins was the author

i read this book four times in grade school. that was a long time ago! :D

best book i've ever read. ever will read.

greenbroke
 
I have read most every Zane Grey book. I realize they aren't very intellectual but they are enveloping and imaginative. I read one again on Thanksgiving by him titled 30,000 on the hoof. It was good but he has some with more desirable endings. I guess the book I prefer the most but don't read enough of is the Bible. Genesis is fascinating and reads like a thriller.
 
Red Robin said:
I have read most every Zane Grey book. I realize they aren't very intellectual but they are enveloping and imaginative. I read one again on Thanksgiving by him titled 30,000 on the hoof. It was good but he has some with more desirable endings. I guess the book I prefer the most but don't read enough of is the Bible. Genesis is fascinating and reads like a thriller.

Proverbs is my favorite, with lots of one-liner bits of wisdom.
 
mr small town said:
harris and me so awesome its about this one kid whos parents died and he has to live with his cuzin harris and they get in all kinds o trouble



it kinda relates to me and my brother.... 8) 8)

I loved that book- so funny we gave it to grandson.
 

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