In The Lonely Men, Louis L’Amour spins the tale of a man who must elude an Apache trap—only to discover that his greatest enemy might be very close to home.Tell Sackett had fought his share of Indians and managed to take something of value from his a deep and abiding respect. But that respect is lost when Apache braves kidnap his nephew, forcing Tell to cross the border into the Sierra Madres to bring the boy back. What troubles Tell more, though, is the boy’s Could she possibly be inventing a rescue mission to deliver her husband’s brother into an ambush?Tell knows that the only things he can depend on are his wits and cold steel. But against such adversaries, even these formidable weapons may not be enough.
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".
I'm rating this one down and I'm man enough to admit that it's mostly pique. The story is good and I've always liked Tell Sackett. This is the third featuring him and L'Amour is a better storyteller with each new book. The only trouble is, the first book featuring Tell ended with him together with Ange. And I adore Ange. So in the previous Tell book, L'Amour had to pack her off back East for some mysterious reason and that sucked. In this one, L'Amour kills her off. Off-screen, in the pre-story, in a big dustup that he may have intended to get to sometime but apparently never has (because I'm reading in chronological order, remember***).
And that just sucks!
And yeah, I like Dorset, the new honey for Tell, but she's awful thin on the pages in this one, floating in and out of the story just enough to hint at her inner awesome. This is the problem with being a romantic reading the Sackett novels, I suppose...
Even worse, though, we get more of Owen's not-yet-ex wife, Laura. She's a cartoon villain from Tyrel's story and does herself no favors here. Her machinations drive much of the story, sending Tell into Apache territory on a goose-chase. I can't actually regret it because he rescues folks and meets Dorset, but still, she's a stone-cold bitch and seriously needs to go away (preferably permanently, though not necessarily fatally).
So yeah. Pique. It's still a good adventure story and Tell is awesome. Poor Ange. If L'Amour has similar treatment for Dorset later on, I may just give this up as a bad experiment...
***Edit: well crap! It turns out the series listing here on GoodReads isn't in chronological order. Gah. So looks like I need an emergency intervention for The Sackett Brand. This may sour me on L'Amour, altogether...
****Edited Edit: I changed the ordering here on GoodReads to reflect the much better chronology given at http://www.louislamour.com/sackett/in.... Future generations shouldn't so much thank me as erect statues and possibly instantiate a small cult...
Tell Sackett is not the sharpest card on the deck, but he is one tough hombre. Laura Sackett appears and tells him her son from Orrin has been taken by Apaches into the Sierra Madre. Tell after escaping from one Apache ambush decides to return to search for his nephew. A bit far fetched in where is Orrin and why is he not looking or why not send a telegram to confirm the story!
Tell heads off with three friends to find the mythical boy and there is lots of action and a new love interest for Tell, called Dorset who I hope to find out more in the next book with Tell. I enjoyed the Apache chase, gunfighting, lynching escape and the description of the Sierra Madres scenery.
I am drawing towards the end at the line of Sackett saga books and I can tell you that this one was probably one of my least favorite.
It tells a story of Tell Sackett as he receives a letter from his brother’s wife that her son has been abducted by a vicious tribe of Apache Indians and that Tell is her only hope to find him and rescue him.
Now of course that is a lie and Tell’s brother’s wife wants nothing but a revenge against the Sacketts. She hates them with passion as they were responsible for her father’s demise.
No matter that her father was a ruthless and a cruel man, she still can’t forgive them for doing what was right.
So Tell rides into the Sierra Madres and sets on a dangerous rescue mission to find his nephew.
What he doesn’t know that there is no nephew at all and his brother’s wife set him what she hopes would be a suicide mission. And if the Indians won’t finish him off, she already hired a group of ruthless thugs to help her finish Tell Sackett one way or another.
*****
This story was more frustrating than anything else.
First the idea that Tell would believe his brother wouldn’t move heaven and earth to find his son is absolutely bonkers.
Second of all a simple telegraph to his brother to check if the story is true or not would make more sense instead of rushing into an Indian village and hope for the best.
The story didn’t make much sense from the get go and if, as a writer, you establish your characters as these people who posses common sense and act according to it, then the plot in this one is kind of mute from the get go. And that’s why it was such a frustrating read.
Anyway, if you are not reading in order and want to read every single Sackett novel, I’d skip this one for sure.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
My husband likes westerns so we picked up this Louis L`Amour audio book for a long car ride we were taking. It is part of the Sackett brothers` saga. This was well written and well read . I could picture the action in my mind as it unfolded. This story focuses on Willian Tell Sackett, Tell. He is lucky to be alive after an ambush and while recuperating at the nearset town is approached by a woman that says she is his sister-in-law. She asks Tell to go after her son, his nephew, after he was kidnapped by indians during a raid.
Of all the Sacketts, Tell is my favorite. As with all of his books, Louis L'Amour grabs you from the first page, and you don't want to let go of the reading experience until you've finished the book.
"Sacketts were a right stubborn folk. We just didn't have much give-up in us. We always kept plugging away, and that's what I was doing this time" p 196. "Now my pappy was always one for figuring things .. when in difficulty a body should always take time to contemplate. The only way folks got to where they are .. was by thinkin' things out. No man ever had the claws of a grizzly nor the speed of a deer -- what he had was a brain" p 201.
William Tell Sackett narrates fight few survive, more tragedy than humor in this story. Billy Higgins "lying out in the glare of the sun .. gut-shot and dying and the apaches were shooting flaming slivers of pitch into your hide" p 231 begs Tell for release. Tell frees "too good a fightin' man to kill" p 115, "scar on his cheekbone" p 126 is "Kahtenny, one of the most dangerous and elusive Apaches .. down and helpless" p 127.
From Yuma to Tucson, Tell rides with John J. Battles "deputy marshal for a time .. steadier with a gun than I should have been" p 205, Spanish Murphy "tall as me but twenty pounds lighter than my one-ninety .. alwas a-reading" p 116, and Tampico Rocca "mother was an Apache" p 117. The four "sweated and thirsted together, we had hungered and fought, and eaten trail dust together; so now we rode as brothers ride" p 123. They are not well distinguished from another, helps see them as a unit.
In the Quartz Rock Saloon were men "born with the bark on .. so rough they wore their clothes out from the inside first" p 131. Tell bluffs down Arch Hadden and "greaser" insult against Rocca.
Worst enemy is lying Laura Pitts Sackett "strikingly pretty young woman, blond and fragile .. pale, delicate flower, aloof, serene, untouchable ..husband .. Congressman Orrin .. separated" p 119. Angry divorceé invents son, kidnapped with Creed boys to Mexico, certain death, hires Hadden to bring "proof" p 176 Tell dead. Pals try to convince Tell "you've been lied to" p 171. Although "almost certain .. wild-goose chase .. Sacketts treated womenfolk gentle, even when they didn't deserve it" p 180.
Sonora "desert is the enemy of the careless .. signs which indicate where water .. flight of bees or birds, the tracks of small animals, the kind of plants" p 141. "I could hear a quail call . . . I hoped it was a real quail" p 210. Glimpsed "buzzards do not always wait for a man to die .. headin' into trouble" p 211.
Dorset Binny "cutest button of a girl you ever laid eyes on .. scarcely more than five feet tall and wore a buckskin .. quick and pert" p 163 comes for her sister. Tell goes back for Harry Brook, lost few years longer. Amid torture, Spanish adapts "old songs" p 165 to warn Tell away. With Battles "both almighty tired .. kept on, because neither of us was smart enough to quit" p 214.
Laura ensures troubles keep coming. A lynch mob invades a prison cell. Suprise twist combines enemy and savior. Haddens take Kahtenny's squaw to force Kahtenny to kill Tell.
I think my Grandpa read every one of his books, once if not twice. So I finally decided I should read one to get a glimpse of the intrigue. Probably shouldn’t have started on the 12th book in the series, but would say there was enough background provided to jump in here and still have details to enjoy it
The Lonely Men, by Louis L'Amour, is another tale in the Sackett Family saga. Tell Sackett is fooled into going on a rescue mission in Apache country, and a few other bad apples are sent after him for good measure. No need to tell anyone familiar with the indomitable Sackett family how that works out.
This was an enormously entertaining entry in the Sackett series, with Tell Sackett jumping from one Crowning Moment of Awesome to the next without ever seeming to pause for breath.
Tell meets his sister-in-law Laura, but doesn't know she's divorced from his brother and that she is a full-fledged Femme Fatale. Laura jumps on an opportunity to get a Sackett killed (vengence for Tell's brothers spoiling her father's evil plan in a previous book) by claiming that her son has been captured by the Apaches. She doesn't have a son, but that's something else Tell doesn't know.
Tell rides into Apache country to rescue his non-existant nephew. This is where we find out where the novel's title comes from. Three men join Tell on the mission. Each is a "lonely man"--someone without a permanent home. But all of them recognize kindred spirits in each other and--even though they don't yet know each other well yet--they know they can depend on each other.
The action that follows is some of L'Amour's best. Tell and his friends do end up rescuing children. That rescue, the ensuing chase, several other encounters with Apaches, a last-stand situation when they seem to be trapped and a plot twist that has Tell teaming up with some Apache to rescue an Apache woman each follows closely on the heals of one another. Perhaps the best moment is when Tell calmly rides into an Apache camp, where one of his friends is now being held prisoner. Tell has no real plan, but he won't desert a friend and simply figures he can make do with whatever situation develops.
Eventually, because of Laura's further machinations, Tell end up in a jail cell facing a lynch mob. This proves to be a big mistake for the mob.
Each of us in his own way wars against change. Even those who fancy themselves the most progressive will fight against other kinds of progress, for each of us is convinced that our way is the best way.
Tried and true formula book by a master of the genre, a true story teller. Never ready a really lousy book by Louis Lamour, just simple adventure tales full of larger than life heroes.
Love this series on the Sacketts; one of the families who moved from the east to the west in the 1800's. In this one, Tell Sackett has to deal not only with Apaches but also his ex sister-in-law who wants him dead. Great entertainment.
Not a bad read. Full of cliches and the main character often repeats himself, when he's taking breaks from talking about some virtuous aspect of his family. It's a tight story, but goes wonky at the end. Still, I enjoyed it most of the way through.
It’s a type of book you want to take your time with & enjoy every beautifully written sentence. I love the way he writes about the land & how to live with it, regardless of how brutal or desolate it might seem.
I enjoyed reading this book. Another one about Tell Sackett; the poor guy never catches a break and trouble always finds him. Hopefully he'll get his happy ending soon.
My wife and I go to Chicago every year and somehow it became a tradition for me to read a L'Amour book on the train ride up there. It was a great trip and a great story.
The Lonely Men is a western style thriller written by Louis L’amour. The book starts out as Tell Sackett is pinned down by the Apaches in a land so bare that there isn’t anything around him except for barren desert. He escapes and moves on to a little town called Tucson where his Sister in law, Laura Sackett tells him that his nephew has been kidnapped by the Apaches and asks him to go into the heart of Apache territory to find him. Will he make it out alive and with his nephew or will he die all alone in the desolate desert? The Lonely Men is a very good book. I think this book is valuable because it has a unique plot. It seems to me that there aren't as many western books as their are other genres so it makes this book a small treasure. The only slow part was when he was in Tucson waiting for his sister in law I thought that part was particularly slow. One part that I really liked about this book was the author's perspective about Native Americans. He didn’t portray them as people with feathers in their headbands who were primitive and inferior to the white settlers. He made them equals to the main characters. This book has a wonderful way of connecting to the reader. In the book some of Tell’s close friends die. We have all had a friend or family member pass away and this connected perfectly to the sadness that followed. This book left me satisfied with the ending and happy with the overall book. The theme of this book is that through perseverance and hard work we can achieve what we set out to do. One example of this is when Tell has to ride multiple days and nights without sleep. Part of which was in the whipping rain and then in the scalding heat of the day to escape from the Apaches. It would have been much easier to have not gone at all or to have given up when things got tough, but he didn't. He didn’t back down and he achieved what he set out to do. This doesn't only apply to the book it also applies to real life. If you stick with it you will succeed.
This adventure has a good side and bad side. William Tell Sackett, and friends Tampico, Spanish Murphy, John J. Battles these men accompanied Tell thru Apache country to rescue his nephew who per his sister in law Laura Pritts Sackett was kidnapped to Mexico. This was a lie, the sister in law was angry with Tell's brother Orrin, a lawyer who moved back to Washington, D.C. Of course Tell wasn't aware of this situation, since he didn't write much, better still he had a hard time reading, which was uncommon in that era. Especially if your families main concern is to keep food on the table and a roof over their families head, education wasn't the families first priority. Tell rescued four white kids from the Apache mountain retreat. One of the kids was with the Apache for two years, he told Tell what he saw and there wasn't any young boy he was looking for in this village. Well now that they've rescued the kids, the return trip will be a true test of the strength of these four hard living men. Tell eventually makes it to a ranch owned a Mexican Don, who gives them all a safe sanctuary. That's when he's told that he was sent to his death, because there wasn't any kidnapped nephew...Tell felt there was something wrong, but couldn't understand why Orrin's ex-wife wanted him dead. On that note, this is a great western story by the greatest western writer, Louis L'Amour....cha cha. Exposes how deep anger, hatred goes and how it feeds the fire of REVENGE. He gives you both sides of the coin..you know..The Indians side and the White men; why they are having a hard time accepting change, which is coming whether they agree or not..Lots of helpful history if you want to believe it or not..Mr L'Amour preserves what he has seen through his travels, and pass it on to the readers....
This is the 12th in the "Sackett" series, about William "Tell" Sackett and his adventures in the Arizona/Mexico borderlands. The book opens with him fighting the Apache, ad mercy-killing a companion who begs for death after being "gut-shot". When asked to go on a mission to save a child kidnapped by the Apache by his sister-in-law, Sacket rounds up a posse (the wonderfully named Spanish Murphy, John Battles, and "Rocco") and they wander off into the desert to look for the Apache. After rescuing some white children from the Apache, Tell realizes that the whole thing is a setup by the family of the man he mercy-killed, who think that he killed the man in cold blood. His companions all killed, Tell makes peace with the Apache before returning to Tucson to confront the people who sent him on this fool's errand; killing most of them, save his ex sister-in-law who he abandons in the desert.
Possibly a good book for those who love the genre? Obviously the book reads as dated, and the treatment of indigenous people is similar to a 1950s Western, with cultural caricatures, and speaking in halted English, while describing things that happened "many moons ago." Interesting to read to get a sense of the Western genre, but the book is so filled with action scenes that they eventually all become dull and meaningless, as its almost immediately clear that Tell Sackett will survive any and all encounters, and everyone else probably won't. Its also inexplicable that Tell makes peace with the Apache leader after having killed dozens of his tribe members. Westerns aren't for me, but the books good reviews suggest it is a well-received entry into the genre.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
I swear if it wasn't for bad luck William Tell Sackett wouldn't have any luck at all. The man can get into more trouble in less time than any two other men. He is also a little to trusting of women. That is probably because he hasn't had much experience with them. However, Orrin has had quite a bit of experience with woman and he isn't any better at seeing through their wiles.
Tell is approached by Orrin's ex-wife Laura and she tells him that Orrin's son has been kidnapped by the Apaches. Tell sets out to find the boy and bring him home. At this point in time most of the Apaches were holing up in Mexico in the Sierra Madres. It is a dangerous mission but Tell just can't leave the boy to fin for himself.
The story is one running battle with the Apaches. It doesn't help that Laura Pritts Sackett is coming up with more ways for Tell to die. She is determined to get him killed. This is one mean spirited woman there isn't a single good bone in her body.
As with the other Tell Sackett stories I enjoyed this one. I love learning about the different countrysides that he travels through as well as the history of the time. I also appreciate that L'Amour never paints the Indian as an evil man. He is just a man that has been raised with a different set of values. All the Sacketts believe this and they talk about it through all the books. I would like to see Tell finally find some peace. He has been through so much and deserves to find a happy and fruitful life.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Solid Sackett tale. This time it's Tell Sackett and he is hoodwinked by Orrin Sackett's ex wife in to going into Mexico, in the lands of the Apache, after a nephew that doesn't exist (though other youngsters were actually taken). On this journey a trio of other men go with him to help, all loners that just ended up traveling together. This book consists mostly of a running gun battle from deep into Mexico back to the border and L'Amour is always good at writing those.
Highly recommend, as a solo work it's a great western. As a part of the Sackett saga it has a slight problem in that we are to assume that the couple of times that we know Tell was with Orrin, he wasnt told of the divorce. Now L'Amour did explain that a bit by having Tell talk about how Sacketts didnt speak of trouble that was past and so on. Though it does seem far fetched that he would be hoodwinked so completely and that he hadnt heard anything about the troubles with the ex, when other people seem to know... But that's a small complaint that really doesnt hurt a well told story.
This is another book in the Sackett series and features Tell Sackett. Unlike today, news travels slowly and Tell doesn't know that the ex-wife of Orrin Sackett is "ex" and out to make sure Sacketts suffer. So when she informs Tell there's a young Sackett who has been kidnapped by Apaches, he believes her and off he goes.
It is a fun book, full of adventure and wonderful descriptions of the land. Tell is one of my favorite Sackett characters and his observations are always interesting. The only problem is the book is short! It tells the story, though. It is just me wanting to spend more time there.
If you like traditional Westerns, you've probably already read this book. If you haven't, then pick it up; you'll enjoy it.
Not my favorite Sackett book, I'm afraid. Even though it stars Tell Sackett, who IS my favorite Sackett! Mostly, I think I disliked it because it had Laura Sackett for a villain, Orrin's ex-wife, and she is poisonous and spiteful and horrid. I just wanted to get myself (and Tell) as far away from her as possible. She's really just in bits here and there, but ugh, I hated having to deal with her whenever she cropped up.
I did love how Tell and three friends risked everything to rescue some children. I love protective characters, and that is no doubt why I love Tell Sackett. Also, Dorset was another of L'Amour's wonderful female characters filled with grit and grace. She was the direct opposite of Laura, which was refreshing.
Decent but unexceptional Western. Part of the Sackett series, this volume follows the adventures of Tel Sackett as he attempts to rescue a nephew from Apache country. What most interested me in this work are the two half-baked theories L’Amour throws out to defend his pro-Cowboy stance. Tel muses that Apaches drove a tribe out of their territory to occupy the land they currently hold, so it is the way of history for the white man to drive the Indians out. One of Tell’s unflappable comrades posits the other theory, that the Indian’s undoing was their desire for the white man’s commerce, not, say, his genocidal tendencies.
I picked these up from a used bookstore along with a couple of other westerns. This is not one of usual genres but I have a notion the western hero is part of a chain leading to the great hardboiled detectives. This story is about Tell Sackett on a suicide fission to rescue a nephew he doesn't have from the Apaches in Mexico. He survives and despite killing several Apache warriors he does not hate them. He respects them as a people and as strong fighters. with has sore disdain for the asshole whites he deals with in Tuscon and even at the end when he encounters the woman who lied to him and tried to wave him illegal, his own honor code does not allow him to seek revenge.
A great read (or listen, in this case; the audiobook reader did a great job). Tell Sackett was a major figure of my youth, from reading "The Sackett Brand", but as a boy I never read his other adventure. The is more intricate than the earlier book. L'Amour shows how the Sackett family character can be used against them.
The sense of place is very good: I loved the descriptions of the places, the sounds, the smells, the heat. I liked all the characters; even the villain is somewhat three-dimensional. I liked the concreteness and earthiness; everything is very specific: particular towns, ranches, mines, mountains, all described precisely and economically.