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219 pages, Hardcover
First published November 1, 2004
Buddy Millar was the kind of driver who avoided traveling on a main road with other cars. This distaste for sharing the highway often took him rough-wheeling across the prairie or into a labyrinth of faded gravel tracks. Some of these roads were shortcuts, but most were long, and a few were serious bad dirt.This typifies both the type of characterization throughout the book and also the wildness of the back country where most of the stories are set. Yes, there are towns. Well, sort of. Many times people would drive 20 miles or so to get to a town of a population of 80 where shopping could be conducted. The only time bigger places were mentioned is if one of the characters had come from say, Billings or Colorado Springs.
"___", said Erwin Hungate, the reader, "lay off, will you? Sound like Umberto Eco."There is nothing special and everything special about this collection, the second in her series Wyoming Stories. I have the third in the series marked as wish-list, and I see my library has a copy. I hope not to wait years and years to get to it. This is not 5-stars worth, but definitely a solid 4-stars with perhaps some upward mobility.
"Who?" said Vic.
"I know him," said Old Man DeBock. "Bert Eckle, used a work for Bob Utley. He's out in Nevada now in a home. Home for old cowboys."