L Louis L'Amour is undoubtedly the bestselling frontier novelist of all time. He is the only American-born author in history to receive both the Presidential Medal of Freedom, and the Congressional Gold Medal in honor of his life's work. He has published ninety novels; twenty-seven short-story collections; two works of nonfiction; a memoir, Education of a Wandering Man; and a volume of poetry, Smoke from This Altar. There are more than 300 million copies of his books in print worldwide. "From the Paperback edition."
Louis Dearborn L'Amour was an American novelist and short story writer. His books consisted primarily of Western novels, though he called his work "frontier stories". His most widely known Western fiction works include Last of the Breed, Hondo, Shalako, and the Sackett series. L'Amour also wrote historical fiction (The Walking Drum), science fiction (The Haunted Mesa), non-fiction (Frontier), and poetry and short-story collections. Many of his stories were made into films. His books remain popular and most have gone through multiple printings. At the time of his death, almost all of his 105 existing works (89 novels, 14 short-story collections, and two full-length works of nonfiction) were still in print, and he was "one of the world's most popular writers".
Another outstanding collection of stories from L'Amour. My favorite was "The Diamond of Jeru," which is the perfect example of a jungle adventure. I remember thinking, "Why hasn't someone made this into a movie?" Lo! and behold! Someone actually did make a movie out of it, but it was a made for TV movie in the late 'Eighties, so it probably isn't very good.
There were a lot of stories that I think were at least 99% autobiographical, especially "The Man Who Stole Shakespeare." These aren't even adventure stories. It's all very interesting, especially to those who have also read his autobiography, EDUCATION OF A WANDERING MAN.
Also, it should be mentioned that people mostly think of him as a writer for men. This book actually starts out with a woman as the hero, which was unusual for the time. Take a look at Ponga Jim's crew. It would be perfectly at home today because of so diverse they are. Very unusual, but most people are unaware that L'Amour, considered the Great American Storyteller, was a member of the Communist Party, which explains a lot. It would also explain why Turk Madden worked for the Russians during WWII.
This is a great collection of unusual work from a great storyteller. If you're a fan of L'Amour, you need this book in your life.
Louis L'Amour's son, Beau, writes in the book's Afterword, this is his favorite of all the volumes in the Collected Short Stories. Although very good, I prefer L'Amour's western stories. The tales presented here take the reader to such places as China, North Africa, the East Indies, and the jungles of South America. Memorable characters are Ponga Jim Mayo, Steve Cowan, Turk Madden, and Slug Brophy. Some are pilots, some are sailors, and all are tough as rawhide. The book contains about 45 short stories that took me about nine months to read because I read the short stories when I am between novels. A favorite story, Author's Tea, which is only four pages long describes a writer, Mr. Dungan, who is enduring a social attended by "women who weren't young". (I suspect Mr. Dungan is L'Amour himself.) One of the women comments, "You've had such an interesting life, Mr. Dungan! There must have been so many adventures." "Only the innocent speak of adventure," Dungan says, "for adventure is only a romantic name for trouble, and when one is having 'adventures' one wishes it were all over and he was elsewhere and safe."
It has been a long time since I have read anything that might be considered an Adventure Story. The stories in the books are set from early in the Great Depression through to the beginning of communism in China. There are a series of stories about different adventurers, Ponga Jim Mayo, Turk Madden and Steve Cowen all are exciting and well written which is no less than I would expect from Louis L'Amour. The stories of these three men are set during World War II. From what I have read of Mr. L'Amour's career these must be the stories he sold to magazines that featured adventure stories, i.e. pulp fiction. Even these earlier stories show that Mr. L'Amour was a talented writer destined to be remember long after his death. I am glad that I found all the Collections of Short Stories that Mr. L'Amour's children have put together for all his fans to enjoy. I look forward to the next collection of short stories.
Wasn't sure what the results would be having my favorite western writer tossing about something other than westerns, but I did enjoy this collection so very much. Typical strong main characters fighting it out and in most cases coming out on top. This book went round the world during some interesting times: 20s, 30s, 40s, I think. Flyers and sailers mostly, with mostly hobos and freethinking and freewheeling men, and a few women. Of course, there is almost always the perfect woman nearby.
I gave this to my father who was a huge fan of L'Amour's westerns. When he passed I acquired this and decided to read it to connect to my father. I was quite surprised at how good an author L'Amour was. I expected R.E. Howard and enstead got Hemingway. Looking forward to reading more. Who knows, maybe I'll actually read a western...
anyone looking for a copy of the book YONDERING will find those stories printed here as well as some others that I had not read before. Many of these stories are stories of his own life either experienced by himself or by people he knew and/or worked with.
I enjoyed the nautical stories and other semi-biographical stories in this volume but when he got to WWII, I thought the stories read like adventures from a teenaged action stories book. Improbable action and the good guy conquers all. They were dated (I've nothing against dated stories, but in my opinion these did not stand the test of time) and reflected the mores of the time (e.g., the fade out when he gets the girl). Still, others have enjoyed these, so my opinion is just that - my opinion.
I personally prefer L'Amour-s western short story collections, but if you are a lover of adventure stories around the WWII era, or adventure stories on the high seas, you'll love this collection. My favorites were the stories and novellas based around the character Ponga Jim Mayo and his escapades with his clandestine shipping career during WWII, with his eclectic colorful crew.
This was not my favorite Louis L'Amour collection. In fact, it is probably my least favorite, although I do enjoy Turk Madden stories. This collection was a bit darker than most of Louis' writing. Many of them are set in Southeast Asia, South America, or the Pacific. Many are set during or near WWII.
I really enjoyed these short stories by Louis L'Amour! They are not westerns, but tell of his life in his younger days, as he roamed the world, working.
Note: This book is almost exactly like his book, "Yondering"!
The 4th volume of Louis L’Amour’s collected short stories moved away from the frontier / westerns of the first three into his “adventure” tales. They weren’t quite at the same level, but there were still several gems here. His WWII characters definitely got formulaic, but I try to keep in mind that these weren’t originally published for a single, 600-page reading. (Also, extra points for the glorious back cover author photo..)
A great collection of short western stories to read. I believe there are 8 books in the set. I started reading these after learning Louis L'Amour was my fathers favorite westerns writer.