Here is the wildest of the Wild West gunfights, famous and obscure, brought vividly to life through the fabulous artwork and captivating prose of Bob Boze Bell. Twenty-six famous gunfights of the Old West are presented here, including bigger shoot-outs such as the Battle of the Little Bighorn and the Alamo. Beautifully illustrated with the best maps, historical photos from one of the largest outlaw collections and colorful illustrations, authentic to the times. Every gunfight in this book has been painstakingly researched from a variety of sources and recounted in a concise, no-nonsense narration reflecting the author’s modern wit and reverence for the West.
Bob Boze Bell has always sought to get both the look and the history right. He has published and illustrated books on Earp, Billy the Kid, Doc Holliday and classic gunfights. Bell’s artwork and writing has appeared in Wild West, Arizona Highways, Playboy and National Lampoon. He appears often on the Encore Westerns channel, serves as a talking head on documentaries and since 1999 has been executive editor of True West magazine. “All the artwork I run in the magazine,” he quips, “the magazine gets for free.”
He’s been drawing as long as he can remember, and even as a child he often drew cowboys and gunfighters with an eye to accuracy.
“I hate fakery of any kind,” he says. “I don’t like low-back saddles, Hollywood hats, batwing chaps, inaccurate vests. It drives me crazy.” So is he a historian or an artist?
“I would say I’m actually a cartoonist,” he says. “I don’t really consider myself a historian, because I have historian friends that apply a certain academic level that I don’t have, I don’t claim to have, I can’t claim. But I just want to know the truth for my own sense of me. So I share that, and it’s taken for what it’s worth. I think I’m dismissed by a lot of people for not being a real historian. But I don’t give a damn.”
Bell is actually more of a Billy the Kid fan than a Wyatt Earp fan, but his real heroes are artists Charles M. Russell, Frederic Remington and Norman Rockwell. “Those, to me, are the three big dogs,” Bell says. “No one has topped them.”
He loves scratchboard, pen and ink, and gouache, a form of watercolor. “I work on deadline constantly,” he explains, “and I can’t use oils, which is actually a medium I enjoy, because that takes too long to dry.
“Some of the best things I’ve ever done I’ve done on my lunch hour. And some of the worst things I’ve ever done I’ve spent three months on. You figure it out.”
I love these books! Love the separate sections for reading about each gunfight. Makes it nice whether you have 5 minutes or an hour to read. Love the artwork and the explanation of where info is verified and when it is not.