Newsflash

powered_by.png, 1 kB
JoomlaMonkey Welcome arrow Amazon Store

Message from Dean - May 8th 2007

I am currently testing out a new version of the APF Bridge Component - If you notice any errors within this demo store please drop me a line.

Death of a Gunfighter: The Quest for Jack Slade, The West's Most Elusive Legend

Current Store: US / World Store
In association with Amazon.com

UK Store | Canadian Store | French Store | German Store

Books : Death of a Gunfighter: The Quest for Jack Slade, The West's Most Elusive Legend

  


 : Death of a Gunfighter: The Quest for Jack Slade, The West's Most Elusive Legend

List Price: $29.95
Amazon.com's Price: $19.77
You Save: $10.18 (34%)
Prices subject to change.



Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours



This item ships for FREE with Super Saver Shipping.
Binding: Hardcover
Dewey Decimal Number: 910
EAN: 9781594160707
Edition: 1
ISBN: 1594160708
Label: Westholme Publishing
Manufacturer: Westholme Publishing
Number Of Items: 1
Number Of Pages: 536
Publication Date: October 24, 2008
Publisher: Westholme Publishing
Studio: Westholme Publishing




Related Items: Browse for similar items by category:

Editorial Review:

Product Description:
The Truth Behind the Tragic Hero Who Helped Save the Union and Created the Myth of the American Gunslinger

"There was such magic in that name, SLADE! I stood always ready to drop any subject in hand, to listen to something new about Slade. . . . Slade was at once the most bloody, the most dangerous and the most valuable citizen that inhabited the savage fastnesses of the mountains."--Mark Twain, Roughing It

In 1859, as the United States careened toward civil war, Washington's only northern link with America's richest state, California, was a stagecoach line operating between Missouri and the Pacific. Yet the stage line was plagued by outlaws and hostile Indians. At this critical moment, the company enlisted a former wagon train captain to clean up its most dangerous division. Over the next three years, Jack Slade exceeded his employers' wildest dreams, capturing bandits and horse thieves and driving away gangs. He kept the stagecoaches and the U.S. Mail running, and helped launch the Pony Express, securing California and its gold for the Union. Across the Great Plains he became known as "The Law West of Kearny."

Slade's legend grew when he was shot and left for dead, only to survive and exact revenge on his would-be killer. But once Slade had restored the peace, his life descended into an alcoholic Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde nightmare, transforming him from a courageous leader, charming gentleman, and devoted husband into a vicious, quicktriggered ruffian, who finally lost his life at the hands of vigilantes.

Since Slade's death in 1864, persistent myths and stories have defied the efforts of writers and historians to capture the real Jack Slade. Despite his notoriety and place in history as the first celebrity gunfighter, the pieces of Slade's fascinating life--including his marriage to the beautiful Maria Virginia--have remained scattered and hidden. In Death of a Gunfighter: The Quest for Jack Slade, the West's Most Elusive Legend, journalist Dan Rottenberg assembles more than fifty years of research to reveal the true story of Jack Slade, one of America's greatest tragic heroes.



Customer Reviews
Average Rating:  out of 5 stars

Rating: 5 out of 5 stars - Not the Lone Ranger
Jack Slade was no Lone Ranger but a roughneck teamster who opened the Overland Trail from Missouri to California, creating a vital link between Washington and the California gold fields. A ruthless defender of his freight lines and the short-lived Pony Express, his violent, drunken binges finally bought about his own end.

Of two personalities, Jack Slade killed some and was feared by many. Mark Twain mythologized him as a gunslinger. Yet the stagecoach passengers who stopped at his relay stations found him polite and gentlemanly. His wife truly loved him but it's hard imagine why. True, he adopted an orphan boy but he himself had instigated the senseless slaughter of the boy's family. He gleefully cut the live ears off a helpless enemy and carried them in his pocket. He drove his horses to death. Like Shiva, he was first a herculean trailblazer and then a destroyer of the very civilization he created.

There's plenty to chew on here: who knew that California gold ... Read More



Rating: 5 out of 5 stars - Death of a Gunfighter
This book provides a great insight into that part of the U.S. lying between Missouri and California in the years before the Civil War. There were lots of heroes, not just Jack Slade. The men who sacrificed their personal finances to buy the stagecoaches from New Hampshire, to find drivers willing to risk their lives to carry people and mail, to establish roads, to build stations every 12 miles or so to accommodate the passengers, to obtain horses to be kept at each station == was an enormous undertaking. The riders and drivers were themselves courageous as were the travelers, ordinary Americans seeking fortune in the West. This book tells it all in just the right amount of detail. Prodigiously researched. Easy to read. A true contribution to U.S. history.



Rating: 5 out of 5 stars - Frontier Capitalism and a Real Gunman
This a book that should appeal to anyone who's interested in economic history or general American history.

Like the biographers who tackle Shakespeare, Rottenberg is writing about someone who hasn't left us a lot of information. He fills in the gaps-- as the Shakespeareans do-- by giving us a picture of the kind of things his subject was doing. In the Shakespeare biographies, we get a picture of the London stage in Elizabethen times. Rottenberg gives us engaging chapters on frontier capitalism-- the adventures of the men who set up ox-drawn freight lines in the decades before the transcontinental railroad connected the West Coast with the rest of the United States. Slade worked for these companies as a wagon master and then a section boss, responsible for hundreds of miles of vital, difficult trail. If you like books like Stephen Ambrose's history of the transcontinental railroad, Nothing Like It in the World, you will find these chapters just as fascinating as I did. Rottenberg ... Read More



Rating: 4 out of 5 stars - The Prototype
Jack Slade was the prototype of the American Western Outlaw. At one point, he was a trusted vilgilante dealing harsh justice in a harsh world (check out the advert inside the book for men for the Pony Express, where it declares a preference for "orphans"). On the other-hand, Jack Slade was a murderous, drunken sort. He is hard to pin down, and thus was a legendary character, even during his life. Mark Twain's infatuation with Slade is constantly being referred to. And it makes sense that Twain would use elements of the Slade myth in his own literary creations.

I had never heard of Jack Slade before. I wonder if he is one of those names lost to history. There's certaintly not a huge amount of certifiable information about him, and this is where Rottenberg really excells; finding and using each bit of information he can. The book has an extensive list of references.

Like I said, I had never heard of Jack Slade before. I don't really like westerns. In fact, I came ... Read More



Rating: 3 out of 5 stars - Needs Sauce
Death of a Gunfighter,Dan Rottenberg's biography of Jack Slade, is and honest attempt to shed some new light on one of of the Wests first " bad men." And as a general history of the old west dealing with some areas that do not usually get covered this is a very good book. The one thing missing is Jack Slade himself. Mr.Rottenberg has done the best he could with a paucity of information scouring out every source available, but details are in short supply. And in the end you are left wanting more. Like a spaghetti dinner without the sauce it just doesn't fill you up. Another problem is that Slade himself just doesn't come off as being on the same level as a Wild Bill or Wyatt Earp. Still this is a well researched book that anyone who loves the old west should enjoy.






Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours



 

 

© 2007 - 2008 Joomla Monkey - a web property of Dean Marshall Consultancy Limited
Website maintained by Lancaster website designer - Dean Marshall

Dean Marshall Consultancy - Lancaster web designers and Joomla experts
Web Designer Lancaster
Web Designers Lancaster
Lancaster Web Designer
Lancaster Web Designers
Expert Joomla Hosting
Expert Joomla Hosting
Expert Joomla Hosting
Expert Joomla Hosting
CMS Training
CMS Training
Editable Sites Editable Web Sites Joomla Consultant
Joomla Consultants
Joomla Consultant
Joomla Consultants