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Description:TheWill James Books is sure to engage and entertain collectors, James fans, and Western enthusiasts who appreciate stories and sketches of the ranching world. This reference describes the first editions of all 24 Will James titles and includes summaries of more than 160 Will James cowboy stories, illustrated with 200 black-and-white sketches by James.The Will James Books contains 50 color photographs of the original dust jackets from Frazier's own collection of first-edition James titles. An appendix details and gives samples of James's signature variations from 1915 to his death in 1942. Don Frazier researched TheWill James Books with painstaking care and presents it with humor and an evident love of the subject. This is an invaluable resource for anyone interested in American literature and art. |
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From the pages of All in the Day's Riding: "In this book is a variety of writings that tell of the cowboy's riggings, the cowboy today, and why the high heels, the big hat and such like, along with experiences in narrow escapes that's all in the day's riding. I'm not stretching the truth in none and all can be proved in most every day of the cowboy's life. Even the stories, they might sound like fiction but they're from facts. I can tell a lie with a grin while making a horse trade but I can't write fiction, and as far as my writing being in cowboy vernacular, as some say, it strikes me as being only as anybody would talk who got his raising and education outside, and where university roofs is the sky and the floors prairie sod." |
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"It combines the lives of a boy and a horse as inseparably and convincingly as it presents the American West and an absorbing story." "This is the story of a cowboy and a cowhorse-born on the same day. They growed up together to where they was big enough, Big-Enough for most anything." DESCRIPTION: Will James introduces this delightful tale for adults and children alike. Young Billy was a born cowboy-unfortunately, his parents have other aspirations for him and send him off to be "edducated and turned into something else." But one day Billy takes his horse, Big-Enough, and departs to pursue his true destiny, finding adventure, adversity, and ultimately manhood. |
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DESCRIPTION: Smoky, the Cowhorse is the story of a horse--from his first hours on the prairie sod to his final years out to pasture. Smoky grows up wild and wise to the ways to the range, fighting wolves and braving stiff winds. Clint, a bronco-busting cowboy on the Rocking R Ranch, spots the spirited four-year-old and thinks it is the finest little horse he ever saw. After many adventurous years on the Rocking R, Smoky mysteriously disappears, only to turn up later as an outlaw bucking horse on the rodeo circuit. |
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DESCRIPTION: Ride with Andy, Stub, and Hugh as they rope and wrangle their way into all sorts of adventures--and some trouble too! Old habits die hard for riders with outlaw ways, and when a range superintendent hires them to round up the orneriest mustangs in the country, they find a way to pad the numbers. With the money from the job, the mustangers start an honest ranch, but a crotchety cattleman crowds their turf--that is, until they set him straight with some tricks of their own. This fast-paced tale of riding, roping, and rustling is sure to set your spurs a-jingling for the frontier spirit of the Old West. |
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DESCRIPTION: This is the story about "sand"--the gumption it takes to tackle the challenges of life. Set in the high plains, the characters are cowboys and horses. And the heart of the story is the hero's long duel with the black stallion, and how "the little grain of sand within him" starts to grow. |
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DESCRIPTION: A classic collection of eight cowboy stories, now available in a new edition for the first time in decades. Cowboys North and South showcases Will James's talent for capturing the life-style and picturesque vernacular of the American cowboy. |
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DESCRIPTION: Billy is orphaned at the age of four when a steer gores his father. A year later, Billy leaves his home ranch--the only life he has known--and strikes out across the land with Bopy, an old French-Canadian trapper. Bopy doesn't speak English very well, but they develop a strong friendship as they gallop across plains, over mountains, and through forested landscapes. While Bopy is busy prospecting and trapping, Billy spends his time drawing, reading, roping with cowboys, and playing with his pet wolves, Gros and Otay. Through his adventures, Billy discovers what he values most and learns that he can weather anything life throws at him, including a nosy grizzly bear and the harsh winter of the Canadian north-country. |
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DESCRIPTION: Imagine round-up wagons, saddle horses, riders, branding irons, and the wide open range --a place where "there's not a fence as far as you can see, nothin' but blue grass ripplin' in the sun." Will James delivers all of that and more in this collection of eight short stories. |
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DESCRIPTION: First published in 1925, these seven stories revolve around the adventures of a lanky cowboy named Bill, whose drifting takes him throughout the West as he lives the hard life of a working cowboy. |
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DESCRIPTION: Without pulling a single six-gun, fanning a trigger, or using any other stock device of Western fiction, Will James tells the story of life on the Seven X Ranch during the early 1900s. This authentic portrait of a ranching family details their dangerous work, their dreams and aspirations, and the rugged land in which they lived |
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DESCRIPTION: A scorpion grabs you with its claws, but its poison comes from where you'd least expect it-the tip of its tail. A fine-looking chestnut bronc receives the name Scorpion when he explodes unexpectedly after several days of unusually good behavior. "That horse," a bronco-busting cowboy says, "is going to be either mighty good or mighty bad."One day Tim, an outlaw on the run, trades his tired horse for Scorpion, and the two forge a relationship of destiny. Though never a well-broke horse, Scorpion acts truly wicked only when Tim makes poor decisions-thus keeping Tim out of trouble. With a little unsolicited help from Scorpion, Tim finds romance and a reason to clear his name. |
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DESCRIPTION: Sun Up, the sixth title in the Tumbleweed Series of Will James reprints, collects some of James's best stories from his previous work along with seven original stories, all accompanied by the author's lively illustrations. Here are stories of cowboys growing up, learning the ropes, proving their mettle, even falling in love, each told in the inimitable, colorful style of Will James. |
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DESCRIPTION: Ten-year-old Kip and his eleven-year-old sister Scootie travel from the city to spend the summer on a western ranch. They learn to ride, to throw a rope, and almost everything a cowboy needs to know from one of the best and kindest of cowboys--old uncle Bill. Kip and Scootie ask lots of questions about cowboying--the ones you've always wanted to ask--and Uncle Bill patiently responds, coloring his answers with stories from his younger days of riding the rough string. He tells them how handling cattle came to be called cowpunching, what hackamores and tapideros are for, and why some horses have a wild nature. Uncle Bill's wisdom and knowledge keep the children out of trouble--most of the time--as they ride the range and join in the roundup. So ride along with Kip, Scootie, and Uncle Bill on a western adventure you'll never forget. |
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DESCRIPTION: The day after arriving for their third summer on the Five Barb Ranch, twelve-year old Kip and thirteen-year old Scootie ride out with Uncle Bill to round up horses. They find the bunch they want, but three renegade horses stir up trouble and lead Uncle Bill on a wild chase. Kip and Scootie try to keep up through the rough hills but end up lost and on foot. Over the next few days, they learn plenty about resourcefulness and self-reliance for, as Uncle Bill says, "Old Mother Nature and necessity sure don't stinge on education." Join Kip, Scootie, and Uncle Bill for some wild adventures in the saddle, bareback, and on foot as they follow each other's trackstracks and find--among other things--the three renegade horses. In the Saddle with Uncle Bill is Will James's second book with Kip, Scootie, and the wily cowboy. |
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DESCRIPTION: By the time Billy Roper was one year old, his dad was toting him along on horseback rides, and in a few more years Billy was leading his own pony around the corral. While keeping the branding fire hot at roundup time, young Billy watches the skillful riding and roping of the ranch hands and learns about the hard work and responsibilities required of a cowboy. In between rides around the ranch, Billy takes on the serious business of learning to read and write his ABCs, coaxed along by the incentive of writing an order for his first pair of spurs. Readers ages 8 and up who have dreamed of riding and owning a horse will gallop through Young Cowboy, reining in just long enough to imagine themselves in the 31 line drawings and 5 color paintings that illustrate the story. |
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After a dreary winter of studying hard and making good grades in their big eastern-city home, Kip and Scootie are ready for another summer out west. Barely an hour after exiting the train, they are in the saddle again galloping onto the open range to help their uncles Frank and Bill drive a herd of cattle to market. It's exactly what they want--adventure. Their first night out a terrible thunderstorm incinerates a pine tree and scatters the herd. Kip and six of the bulls are lost in the confusion. Despite the mishap, more soggy nights on the range, and a close call crossing a flooding creek, Kip's and Scootie's spirits soar with excitement. This is their third summer on the range, and action is what they have come to expect. Look-See with Uncle Bill is Will James's third book with Kip and Scootie and the eighteenth book in the Tumbleweed Series. James's 30 line drawings make it clear to the reader why Kip and Scootie are ready to trade in the fine china and glitter of the big city for rock plates and campfires. |
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In 1938, a limited number of The Will James Cowboy Book were published as supplemental readers for Texas school children. Never widely distributed, this is the first time that this rare Will James title has been made available to the general publid. In addition to presenting favorite tales from Smokey, the Cowhorse and All in the Day's Riding, the author includes useful instruction on how to read brands. Illustrated with fifty-three pen-and-ink drawings, this short-story collection is sure to delight and entertain both children and adults. |
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Perhaps the finest story of the rodeo ever written. A story of horses and a corking good one." --Chicago Tribune Join Flint Spears in his quest to be the best all-around cowboy on the rodeo circuit, from busting broncs in the very first rodeo on the range to roping steers in front of royalty in Europe. Anyone who enjoys Will James or western lore will enjoy this novel that's bustin' with ornery strings of outlaw horses, sailing lariats, and broken bones. First published in 1938, Flint Spears captures the terror and triumph of the rodeo circuit from its beginnings. Will James's prose and 30 pen-and-ink drawings place you in the stands cheering the flawless bronc riders and booing all those cowboys and cowgirls that "grab leather." After reading Flint Spears and looking at the 21 black-and-white photographs, you'll need to brush the dust off your chaps--and you too will understand why the rodeo is "the finest, squarest, and hardest fought contest there is." |
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Sent away as a colt because his color didn't reflect his fine racing lineage, Colonel—the Dark Horse—finds himself in a strange land thousands of miles from home. Charro, born in the arid badlands of the West and orphaned at a few months of age, is rescued from starvation by a cowboy named Brad. At the Hip-O Ranch on the edge of the badlands, fate brings these two colts together to form an unbreakable bond. At first, the two colts are content to be fed and groomed by human hands. But one day, when someone leaves a corral gate open, Colonel and Charro head off into wild-horse country for adventure and a taste of freedom. Along the way, they outsmart four mountain lions, survive a mustang attack, and kick dirt in the face of the mustangers who want to capture them and sell 'em to the highest bidder. With forty line drawings and colorful prose, Will James vividly renders two weak-kneed, green colts who become the best of their breeds: Colonial, a race-winning champion, and Charro, the wiliest wild mustang the West has ever seen. For ages 10 and up |
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Through Will James's accomplished storytelling and expressive drawings, readers will enter the magical world of chilhood where a rocking horse rounds up cattle and toy ponies gather in a homemade corral. This story is sure to delight every reader who has yearned for a horse and the life of a cowboy. |
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