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Twenty-Four Years a Cowboy and Ranchman in Southern Texas and Old Mexico: Desperate Fights with the Indians and Mexicans

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Twenty-Four Years a Cowboy and Ranchman in Southern Texas and Old Mexico: Desperate Fights with the Indians and Mexicans

de Hale, Will

  • Usado
  • very good
  • Tapa dura
  • First
Estado
Very Good/No Dust Jacket
Librería
Puntuación del vendedor:
Este vendedor ha conseguido 5 de las cinco estrellas otorgadas por los compradores de Biblio.
Maplewood, Missouri, United States
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Sobre este artículo

Norman, OK: University of Oklahoma Press, 1959. Very good hardcover with no dust jacket. 1959 reprint edition, marked first printing.. First Thus. Hard Cover. Very Good/No Dust Jacket.

Sinopsis

The Caribbean as Fermor experienced it in the 1940's was a world of incredible fusions and contradictions that didn't exist anywhere else in the world -- the mix of indigenous, African and European cultures, the juxtaposition of American advertisements with ancient cannibal practices, the incredible richness of the natural environment coupled with the decaying state of the colonial cities. Although Fermor had travelled extensively, he found the West Indies to be unlike anything he could have imagined, and each new experience is a surprise. This book is a pleasure to read, full of excitement and rich sensory experience, as well as beautifully written. Language, religion, costume, geography - the author inquires into everything, and because of this natural curiosity, he gets himself into some interesting, and often funny, situations, like being chased around the beach by a blindfolded man with a divining rod. Equally interesting, though, are his descriptions of the specific melding of cultures that has occurred exclusively in these islands:"The afternoon was baking and shadowless, and the town seemed only with an effort to remain upright among its thoroughfares of dust. It was as empty as a sarcophagus. The French guide-book describes it as a great centre of elegant Creole life in the past, hinting at routs and cavalcades and banquets of unparalleled sumptuousness. Acts of God must have fallen upon it with really purposeful vindictiveness, for not by the most violent manhandling of the imagination could one associate a chandelier or a powdered wig with this collection of hovels. Not even a dog was to be seen. But behind a tall crucifix stood a cemetery of such dimensions - Pere Lachaise and the Campo Santo gone mad...These acres inhabited by the dead, these miniature hails and palaces and opera-houses, were, it occurred to me, the real town, and the houses falling to ruins outside the railings were in the nature of a negligible suburb."He is generally respectful of the cultures he encounters, and describes the dining habits of cannibals without batting an eyelash:"The victims were prepared while still alive, by cutting slits down the back and sides into which pimentos and other herbs were stuffed. After being dispatched with a mace, they were trussed to poles and roasted over a medium fire, while the women busied themselves turning and basting, and catching the lard in gourds and calabashes, which they allowed to set and then stored away. They would eagerly lick the sticks where the gravy had fallen. Often the meal was half roasted, and then half boiled. Some of the meat was eaten on the spot, the rest was cut up and smoked and also prudently put by for lean or unpatriotic periods in the future. But there was a symbolical aspect to these banquets. They were considered to seal a military victory, to put it for ever beyond question. De Rochefort reports that a Carib prisoner, while being made ready, would jeer at his captors, saying that, although they would soon be eating him, he had already swallowed so many of their family or tribe, and was so thoroughly nourished on their neighbours and kin, that they would virtually be eating one of their own people. This kind of language would continue until the final blow was delivered. It never failed to exasperate the company, and to cast an atmosphere of dejection over the whole meal." That is the beauty of this narrative -- it is just one tasty morsel after another.

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Detalles

Librería
The Book House - St. Louis US (US)
Inventario del vendedor #
201005-RD24
Título
Twenty-Four Years a Cowboy and Ranchman in Southern Texas and Old Mexico: Desperate Fights with the Indians and Mexicans
Autor
Hale, Will
Formato/Encuadernación
Tapa dura
Estado del libro
Usado - Very Good
Estado de la sobrecubierta
No Dust Jacket
Edición
First Thus
Editorial
University of Oklahoma Press
Lugar de publicación
Norman, OK
Fecha de publicación
1959
Palabras clave
Old West; Cowboy; Ranch; Texas; Mexico; Memoir; American History
Catálogos del vendedor
American West;

Términos de venta

The Book House - St. Louis

All orders shipped within 48 hours with delivery confirmation. We want you to be satisfied with your order and will make every effort to describe accurately and ship promptly. Return claims must be filed within two weeks of receiving item. Returned items may incur a small processing/handling fee depending on the circumstances.

Sobre el vendedor

The Book House - St. Louis

Puntuación del vendedor:
Este vendedor ha conseguido 5 de las cinco estrellas otorgadas por los compradores de Biblio.
Miembro de Biblio desde 2005
Maplewood, Missouri

Sobre The Book House - St. Louis

Booksellers since 1986. We have over 350,000 books in our open shop located in the St. Louis, Missouri area about 45,000 listed online. A portion of all proceeds support Second Chapter Life Center for young adults with special needs.

Glosario

Algunos términos que podrían usarse en esta descripción incluyen:

Jacket
Sometimes used as another term for dust jacket, a protective and often decorative wrapper, usually made of paper which wraps...
Reprint
Any printing of a book which follows the original edition. By definition, a reprint is not a first edition.

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