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Titus Bass #2

Buffalo Palace

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In Buffalo Palace , the young Titus Bass sights, and then sets out into, the vast Rocky Mountain country, where he has his initial experiences with trapping beaver, surviving the freezing winter, fighting fierce Indians and even fiercer fellow mountain men, and celebrating at the hard-earned summer rendezvous. Most memorably, we walk with Titus as he first sees the immense herd which originally fueled his wanderlust, and now feeds, clothes and houses the frontier's pioneers, when he reaches the country lovingly called the "Buffalo Palace."

576 pages, Paperback

First published January 1, 1996

41 people are currently reading
160 people want to read

About the author

Terry C. Johnston

77 books102 followers
Terry C. Johnston was born January 1, 1947 in Arkansas City, Kansas.
Nineteen publishers rejected Johnston's first novel, Carry the Wind, before it was printed in 1982. However, this first novel was to gain the honor of receiving the Western Writers of America Medicine Pipe Bearer's Award for best first fiction. Johnston is known for his eye for historical detail, and he is a stickler for accuracy. He is known for traveling and exploring down known and unknown dusty roads during the hot summer months, and traversing slippery, muddy roads and hiking through snow to stand upon a historical sight that he would tell his readers in an upcoming book. "Parking in the lower lot, I trudged up the hill to reach the spot where Colonel John Gibbon's infantry waited out the last hours before their attack on the unsuspecting camp. Standing there in the icy snowstorm I was totally overwhelmed by the sight of those skeletal cones of lodgepoles standing stark against the low, gray sky . . ." Some of the sites that he would stand upon were known to the world like the Little Big Horn Battlefield and others would be obscure to the average reader like the Weippe Prairie north of Lochsa. He is known to combine "a roaring good tale with fascinating insights into the lives and times of his principal characters, generally managing to employ his extensive knowledge to enhance a story rather than intrude upon it" (Whitehead, 1991). Johnston would say that he considered himself "not a literary writer but a storyteller." His desire was to reach and teach thousands if not millions of readers about the early western frontier.

He accomplished part of this goal, not only through his books, but through discussions given to elementary children, lectures at symposiums, and historical one-week tours "during which you will re-live the grit and blood, the tears and tragedy of the great Indian Wars." He would blend historical fact with human emotion to re-create the past during his historical tours each summer. One presentation he gave to a fourth grade class was about the Plains Indian culture. He held a discussion with a Honors English class in Castle Rock middle school about "research, writing, and editing that goes into producing two historical novels each year, when compared to their "term papers." He gave keynote speeches at seminars and lectures at symposiums. He traveled all around Montana to sign books for fans, and he signed the books at the local Albertson's in each town. He held radio interviews that "took me into cities, talking before audiences, I never would have managed to reach otherwise."

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5 stars
183 (52%)
4 stars
121 (34%)
3 stars
36 (10%)
2 stars
5 (1%)
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4 (1%)
Displaying 1 - 18 of 18 reviews
Profile Image for Joe L.
118 reviews9 followers
March 15, 2022
Terry C Johnston delivers again. We’ll written and with historically accurate places to boot. He really did his homework with places and geography.
Thankfully I still have 7 books to go in this series. I’ll spread them out so it’s not over too quickly haha.
A must read for any western reader or even someone that loves great historical fiction or both.
1 review
March 1, 2017
Great book!

Great book about trapping in the wild and wonderful West. Exciting and touching and enlightening. I recommend this to anyone that likes a good tale of adventure.
86 reviews
December 12, 2021
Great second book in the Titus Bass narrative. Very detailed. You feel like you are there.
But sometimes it gets to be too much detail.
Love them anyway.
Profile Image for Steve.
Author 1 book4 followers
February 28, 2008
This book continues the adventures of Titus Bass and is a detailed account of how he sets off to become a mountain man. From the details here, you could probably learn to set your beaver trap. Real page-turner.
Profile Image for Jeff Morris.
5 reviews1 follower
July 16, 2013
What a great book. The detail of the trapping and the glorious expansive shining mountains make you fell like you are there. The younger Titus Bass is learning the ways of a mountain man. Read this one twice.
46 reviews1 follower
July 11, 2022
This the second book in the Titus Bass series and while very detailed and at times a little slow, still a hard book to put down. Johnston does a remarkable job of combining historical facts wrapped around a fictional character. My advice at this juncture? Do not read this series out of its intended order.
59 reviews
August 28, 2020
Johnston puts you in the moment, as if you're sensing everything the characters feel. It's a great story and the series is a wonderful saga of a man living as a trapper during the beaver trade years.
Profile Image for Marianne.
2,337 reviews
July 24, 2019
I was captivated by the grandeur of this story. The writing is superb. Brought to mind the sweeping stories of Africa by Wilbur Smith.
5 reviews
July 29, 2019
Terry Johnston at his best

It's the third of fourth time reading the titus bass series.now on to crack in the sky.the best series I've ever read.
25 reviews1 follower
December 3, 2020
Great story

Terrific story youth and a new land. Great story telling ,A well laid out story of the struggles of old.
Profile Image for Ira Clevenger.
12 reviews7 followers
Read
May 29, 2021
Book was a good read although a little difficult at times as it was written using the speech of the early 19th century.
Profile Image for Steven.
Author 59 books139 followers
April 10, 2025
I'm thoroughly enjoying the adventures of Titus Bass. My only complaint is Johnston's need to continually remind us about things that have already happened. But I'm looking forward to the next book.
Profile Image for Lisa.
47 reviews
December 31, 2024
Read this because I remember my dad liked it so well. It's a trapper story with intricate detail. I prefer to read books with less detail, leaving my imagination to explore, and I ended up skimming some paragraphs. All in all, it was a decent book if you like the old old West genre.
Profile Image for Pa.
170 reviews3 followers
July 1, 2008
This is a book about mountain men in the American west in the years around 1825. The story drags a bit in spots, but is generally a worthwhile read and it give a good impression of both the day-to-day hard work and boredom of beaver trapping, and the occasional terror of hostile savages. The hero is by no means a superman, and he certainly takes his licks.
Profile Image for Michael.
72 reviews4 followers
April 25, 2024
Ol Scratch trapping beaver and killing indians

Book 2 even better than Book 1. Scratch is in the Rockies trapping and living the free trapper life...excellent book.
62 reviews4 followers
March 14, 2016
I unexpectedly enjoyed this story of historical fiction about the beaver fur trade.
Displaying 1 - 18 of 18 reviews

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