Famous Guns of the Old West

[ReviewAZON asin="0762745088"]
From the Model 1866 .44-40 Chief Joseph famously surrendered to General Miles (now gathering dust in a museum in Fort Benton) to Buffalo Bill’s .50 caliber breechloading needlegun nicknamed Lucretia Borgia, a good portion of the actual guns that were once in the hands of the heroes and villains of the old West are still in existence, scattered around in a dozen different museums across the country. Although there are a host of titles that take advantage of our endless curiosity about western firearms (it’s a cottage industry unto itself), there is no single book that traces the natural history of the individual guns. Famous Firearms follows the life stories of twelve of the actual pistols, rifles, and shotguns that were so instrumental in shaping our western mythology, using them as entrees into the lives of the shootists themselves. The end result is a vivid portrait of twelve famous western characters, paired with the guns they used to make themselves famous and infamous.
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Blood and Thunder – Epic Story of Kit Carson

This excellent book by Hamton Sides, author of Ghost Soldiers, is a whopping 557 pages, chock full of historical facts swirling mostly around the life of the legendary, Kit Carson. It is a masterful job. Read the rest of this entry »

Kit Carson: Mountain Man & Scout

[ReviewAZON asin="1436693020"]In 1826 a seventeen-year-old Christopher 'Kit' Carson ran away from his job as apprentice to a saddler in Franklin, Missouri and joined a merchant caravan bound for Santa Fe in the far Southwest. The flight marked his entry into the pages of history. In the decades that followed, Carson gained renown as a trapper, hunter, guide, rancher, army courier, Indian agent, and military officer. Along the way, his varied career as a frontiersman elevated him to the status of a national hero, on a par with Daniel Boone. In 1856, while at home with his family in Taos, New Mexico, Kit (being illiterate) dictated his autobiography, which dealt with the innumerable adventures he had experienced to that point. However, some of the most significant episodes in his life would unfold in the ensuing years, leading up to his death in 1868. Since Taos artist and writer Blanche Chloe Grant first edited and published the Carson manuscript in 1926, it has become the central source for all subsequent biographers. In 1935 Milo Milton Quaife annotated another edition under the title of Kit Carson's Autobiography, published by Lakeside Press of Chicago, and afterward reprinted by the University of Nebraska Press. Western historian Harvey Lewis Carter followed suit with publication of the most heavily edited version yet, with his 'Dear Old Kit': The Historical Christopher Carson (University of Oklahoma Press). Sunstone Press by electing to bring back into print Miss Grant's original 1926 book, regarded perhaps as the handiest of the three published versions, calls attention anew to this pioneering memoir of the celebrated Kit Carson.[/ReviewAZON] Read the rest of this entry »

Writing Western Fiction

Writing a Western Fiction Novel

Writing western fiction novels or short stories is easy for those who have a love for the genre and are familiar with the history of the period. If you want to write western fiction and you want to have some authenticity to your story, you’ve go to become familiar with the history of the West. You’ll need to ride down some of the dusty trails ridden by the outlaws and settlers who populated the Old West. Writing western fiction only becomes easier the more you know about the time period in which you are writing.

Writing Western Fiction: History & Culture

Once you’ve gotten a feel for the history, you’ll need to become familiar with the life styles, the way people lived, and the culture. For example, settlers who came to live out in the undeveloped and untamed parts of the West, lived much differently than those who came to live in the towns. Those who lived on ranches had a different life than those who lived in small, frame shacks or mud huts. And, of course, the Indians and the Mountain Men lived even different. For a writer of western fiction, these facts are essential to know.

Writing Western Fiction: The Tools, Weapons & Technology

Every writer of western fiction will need to understand the tools, the weapons, and the technology that existed in the period of time about which he or she is writing. For example, if you’re writing a western fiction story and it’s set in the 1860’s, you’d make a serious error if you had your character shooting a Colt “Peacemaker,” which was a single action revolver introduced in 1873. Writing western fiction cannot be done without a clear knowledge of the weapons of the Old West.

Writing Western Fiction & Geography

Like any area of writing, one who is writing western fiction has to know something about the subject. In the case of westerns, there’s a large landscape to know. It’s possible to learn about a small segment of the West and construct a story based on that small segment. Writing western fiction focused on a small, geographic section of the frontier West is easier than writing a story involving, let’s say, a trek across the prairies to Oregon on the famous Oregon Trail. However, even when you’re focused on a small segment of the Old West, unless all the characters are unique to the setting and don’t have a background (and tools or weapons) from another part of the West, the writer is going to have to be careful, since tools, weapons, lifestyles and transportation were pretty much the same across the frontier. The more you know, the better.

The best way to become a good western fiction writer is to read as much of the lore as you can. All those who aspire to one day be sitting at a desk writing western fiction have read enormous amounts of material. Read history. Read western fiction writers who are good at their craft. For example, if you read someone like Louis L’Amour, you’ll get a good feel for the West and the characters that populated it, as well as the tools and weapons. He painted word pictures of the Old West and its characters that remain unmatched. There was none better. He was the Dean of Western Fiction writers.

When it came to the art of writing western fiction, no one wrote the stories as well as he did.

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