A cattle drive from Texas to New York City in 1854? Could it be?
Not only could it, it absolutely did happen. Award-winning author Johnny D. Boggs, inspired by that little-known story from the life of real cattleman Tom Ponting, tells an unforgettable tale of the West. But he begins his story in 1840 across the Atlantic in England where Ponting was born on a stock farm and learned as a lad to drive cattle to market a hundred miles away in London.
Boggs weaves a tale that is hard to put down. His ear for language and the cadence of speech is wonderful. “You are nothing more than the pidgeon-livered ragbag you have always been,” says a self-important English cattle buyer to Ponting’s drover boss who responds, “At least I am no malmsey-nosed hornswoggler.” Years later, Ponting’s cattle drive from East Texas to New York is spawned by one of those things that make for a great adventure: a bet.
While I have not read every book Boggs has written (and there are many), I have read some fine work. They include “Northfield,” about the James-Younger gang’s Northfield, Minnesota bank robbery, “Camp Ford,” set in a Confederate prisoner of war camp in Texas and the Union prisoners challenging the guards to a baseball game, and “Greasy Grass,” that tells the story of Custer’s Last Stand from both sides. “Longhorns East” may very well be his finest to date.