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He Rode Alone: An Original Gold Medal Novel

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Eddie blames the Snelling family for the death of his parents and sister during the wagon trip, and his cold and dangerous life is focused on slowly and terribly destroying the family.

255 pages, Paperback

First published October 1, 1956

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About the author

Steve Frazee

110 books5 followers
Steve Frazee was born in Salida, Colorado. He began making major contributions to Western pulp magazines with stories set in the American West as well as a number of North-Western tales published in Adventure. Not surprisingly, many of Frazee's novels have become major motion pictures.

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Displaying 1 - 4 of 4 reviews
Profile Image for Dartharagorn .
192 reviews3 followers
November 26, 2022
Like others have said. This is definitely not a shoot-em up type western. More of one boy/mans journey dealing with the trauma of what happens to his family. How he chooses to deal with it and how he finally gets some closure. The ending was amazing and was a hell of a twist I never saw coming and made it so good! If you're looking for a shoot em up then skip this one. Other than that it's a great story masterful written. You can really feel the Ed's pain. Highly recommend!
151 reviews7 followers
May 13, 2021
This is not a Western. This is not escapist literature. Frazee's got something to say about the human condition in this book. A plot summary would only be misleading. It would sound like a standard revenge yarn and this book is most definitely not that. It's a story about a human heart, really. Eddie went through a severe trauma when he was thirteen and he doesn't want anything like that to ever happen to him again but being closed-off is spiritual suicide and, deep down, he seems to know that. There's genuine suspense about whether he'll find his way.
Yeah, this one surprised the hell out of me.
Profile Image for Alton Motobu.
741 reviews3 followers
September 14, 2020
On the way to California in 1855 13-year-old Ed Cushman is orphaned when his family dies from cholera. The other family in the wagon train takes the Cushman's supplies and abandons him. He finds his way to a small trading post where the people take him in and train him to be a blacksmith. But Ed is filled with anger and vengeance toward the people who abandoned him, so he leaves the trading post after three years and wanders throughout the Rockies for the next 16 years. He stumbles into a gold mining camp one day and is befriended by the miners. There is a lunch wagon where a woman (Lizzie) has set up a business to feed the miners for gold. But one day the woman's father and brother show up - it turns out they are members of the family that abandoned Ed years ago, and Lizzie is the daughter. Ed is enraged when all of the memories return, and he is ready to kill them. But cooler heads prevail, and Ed decides to let them be. He and Lizzie ride into the sunset.

Ed Cushman is not a likeable character. He has reason to be unfriendly and vengeful, but he does not know how to free himself of this burden. The ending is sudden and hopefully he and Lizzie will find happiness together.
Profile Image for Charles.
Author 41 books297 followers
December 23, 2008
Slow in places, but pretty good. I didn't like the main character that much.
Displaying 1 - 4 of 4 reviews