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Paperback From the Pecos to the Powder: A Cowboy's Anthology Book

ISBN: 0806122129

ISBN13: 9780806122120

From the Pecos to the Powder: A Cowboy's Anthology

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Format: Paperback

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Book Overview

One of the last Old-time cowboys here tells his own story: his boyhood in Texas, wandering from ranch to ranch in the Southwest, the trek to Montana with a trail herd, and his life thereafter among the people and ranches of the area. His account is full of anecdotes, humorous or tragic, which themselves illuminate facets of a way of life that is no more. Bob Kennon knew the Ketchums, Kid Curry, and Western artist Charles M. Russell, who was his friend, as well as many prominent ranchmen of his day. "Perhaps I am the last living rider of those boys who, in 1896, came up that long trail to Montana from what was then the largest ranch in the world, the Terrazas Ranch in Old Mexico," he begins. And he goes on to tell just what the cowboy business was really like not only on the trail and the range, but in the wild, infrequent visits to town, encounters with camp cooks and titled Englishmen, rodeo performances, and all that belongs to the cowboy's existence. The smell of the bunkhouse and the atmosphere of the range pervade every page. A typical cowboy, Bob Kennon did not marry until late in life; indeed, he never seemed quite ready to settle down. But settle he did. After his cowboy days were over, he married and held responsible job as forest ranger, stock inspector, deputy sheriff, and doorkeeper for the state senate of Montana, as well as becoming a rancher himself. Ramon F. Adams, Western bibliophile and lexicographer of Dallas, knows the lore and language of the range as perhaps no other man does today. He was the ideal choice to arrange Bob Kennon's story for publication. Mr. Kennon, he says, "through in his eighties, had a keen mind and deep interest in the history of Montana, he began sending me the story of his life, more material, in fact, than I could use." That he was made good use of that material, this book attests. Joe Beeler of Sedona, Arizona, has been described as "the Charles M. Russell of our time." His paintings, drawings, and bronzes of western subjects are now widely held by museums, institutions, and private collections Jimmy M. Skaggs is Professor of American Studies and Economics at Wichita State University, Wichita, Kansas.

Customer Reviews

1 rating

THEY DON'T COME OFF THE PRESS LIKE THIS ONE ANYMORE

I first came upon "Kickin" Bob Kennon by an article or two in an old copy of TRUE WEST magazine back when ole "Hosstail" Joe Small was publishing it in Austin, Texas. He was the real mccoy (both Small and Kennon) as they say, Kennon having been a forest ranger, stock inspector, deputy sheriff, and doorkeeper for the state senate of Montana, later becoming a rancher, and fortunately for us, a writer. As the review in the October, 1965, TRUE WEST magazine stated "cowboy artist Joe Beeler really put life into the story". That also could be said for both Kennon and his story, plus the renowned writer Ramon F. Adams as well. This book relates first hand, primary source material of what it was like back in the 1890s when Kennon knew the Ketchum gang, was pals to and hung out with the artist Charlie Russell, later meeting some pretty rough customers such as Kid Curry and Curry's brothers. By 1896 Kennon was 'punching cows for prolific Don Luis Terrazas, cattle king of Chihuahua", driving a couple thousand head of Mexican steers to Montana. What yarns this man could spin, and many of them are right there in the book! My hardcover, 1st edition, is signed by artist Joe Beeler, and now that all these hombres have gone on to their respective rewards, this book becomes more and more valuable to me, both in reading material and also dinero. Even ole "Hosstail" and TRUE WEST are now gone too, yeah I know, something called a Hollywood True West is still being published, but it isn't even close to what it once was either, in my opinion. Poor ole Joe Small, he worked so hard to keep TRUE WEST historical, and it has all gone Hollywood and movie 'pop'. So grab a copy of this one if you treasure the old time west of the "I was there, I saw it", mode of history and along with the people who lived in it everyday. Nothing of its like will ever pass this way again. But, and that is a very large BUT, you can still read about it in this book, and others like it. Semper Fi.
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