Louis L’Amour never wasted time with his beginning book chapters. There is immediate action so that the reader has to catch their breath to follow along. It’s a nice way to keep us engaged so that we have an interest in the characters, especially if we can cheer for those characters. Here, the hero is a small boy, about seven years old. Young, yes, but full of pioneer wisdom and common sense. He will undertake a dangerous journey against warpath Indians and nefarious criminals.
Hardy Collins wakes up one morning to find his horse, Big Red, is no longer nearby. Hardy has been travelling with a wagon train under the protection of a couple and his father’s trusted employee. Hardy’s father has gone ahead and will meet them at a fort further west. The young boy, knowing he is responsible for his much-prized horse, walks away to find him, followed by an even younger little girl. Together they find Big Red but upon returning to the wagon train, Hardy discovers only burnt embers and death. He knows a party of Indians have killed everyone else but pretends the wagon train has left without them, so his little companion doesn’t discover the atrocity.
So, the little children turn west and start walking. Big Red is too big for them to mount, plus there is no saddle. Hardy protects his horse, and his horse protects him. As they move along, they are followed by an Indian who wants the horse as a trophy. If that isn’t bad enough, they also meet two men to whom they look for help only to find out they are hard-boiled criminals. And THEY want Big Red, too. Poor Hardy Collins has to outwit them all, using the traits his father taught him, such as disguising his tracks and hunting for food and safe sleeping spots. But winter is coming and now the elements will become another enemy. It’s bad, but Hardy’s father has learned about the wagon train disaster and heads back with trusted men to find his little son. But a new enemy arises when a pack of wolves decides the horse and the two children will make a tasty snack. Will Hardy Collins ever find peace again?
Written in 1968, this Western portrays another era. It’s really about the sacrifices made by the pioneers who headed into the Wild West and how they had to teach themselves about the environment and the world-at-large. Hardy may be just a tyke, but adversity almost from birth has meant he's learned how to track, hunt, forage, and outwit humans and beasts. This is what makes the book so believable. L’Amour writes with a fluidity that doesn’t provide much exposition because his characters are living the moment. I know I was hoping the little lad succeeded but when the cold weather started occurring, I slowed down my reading in case there was bad news ahead. Once again, a Louis L’Amour Western has involved me and made for great bedtime reading.
Book Season = Winter (snowflakes and wolves)