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HomeShop at BookSurgeFictionHistoricalThe Roan Maverick |
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| Customer Reviews: | | Average Customer Review: Write an online review and share your thoughts with other customers.
Well Done Mar 25, 2008 I found the book extremely interesting. I have always been interested in the history of Johnson County and have some personal interest in the history of it. I think the author did a very good job of making an intesting account of the "war" thru the medium of one of the people involved. I have heard some of this history over the years and was very intrigued as it all unfolded.
Great Western Story Jan 22, 2008 well written history based fiction - western drama and life in the old west. worth the reading and share with friends.
2 of 2 found the following review helpful:
Gracious Thanks to my Reviewers and Readers Sep 03, 2007 The Roan Maverick was a long time in the making, and I deeply appreciate your enthusiastic welcome. My mentor in this work, the late frontier historian Thomas M. Tisdale, was descended from both sides of the cattle war--his paternal grandfather having been the settler whose murder precipitated the cattlemen's invasion of Johnson County in 1892, and his maternal grandfather having been one of the associated cattlemen. Although a work of fiction, it was Tom's pioneer ancestors who inspired The Roan Maverick, and it is less a story of the cattle war than the journey of a family through an acute political, economic and social crisis. The impact of this violent controversy known as the Johnson County Range War was devastating, not only to the Tisdale family but to many families in Wyoming whose current descendents still feel the pain of the conflict. My gracious thanks as well go to the residents of Johnson County, who warmly welcomed me and my story, and who felt--as I did in writing it--that it was time for the healing to begin.
3 of 3 found the following review helpful:
Worth its weight in Gold Sep 03, 2007 Wow! I am not an avid reader or a particular lover of westerns, but this story really reached me. It's so timely! But even beyond its timeliness is the opportunity it affords to be a fly on the wall in your great grandmother's pioneer kitchen, where life went on despite tragedies and set-backs, and where kids got to be kids even while they grew up in tough circumstances. The blurb on the back cover says "Ms Strahan's writing bears comparison with the best of frontier narrative, from Laura Ingalls Wilder to Willa Cather", and that's about the size of it--a lot of book in a small package! I can't wait to see where C R Strahan goes next.
2 of 2 found the following review helpful:
A Moving, Unique Story--On So Many Levels Jun 11, 2007 This story breaks through all the stereotypes, debunks myths, and radiates authenticity. It's a western, yet it's literary, and a page-turner to boot. None of its characters was birthed by a cookie cutter, they're actually human in thought, word and deed. And contrary to that ubiquitous western theme of black hats & white hats, particularly where range wars are concerned, as the narrator puts it: "the heroes didn't all line up on one side and the villains the other." The most surprising element of this delightfully surprising debut is that, even though it is written by a woman, it does not limit its audience to women but invites everyone--men and women, old and young alike--into its pages. The skill with which the writer has woven historical fact and humanity into The Roan Maverick shows literary art in its highest form. Ms Strahan is a rarity--a writer who respects the intelligence of her readers, and one who knows that entertainment and education need not be mutually exclusive literary intentions. This is a true gem. It's polished, radiant and timely. The most hauntingly familiar aspect of this story is that it's not just about a range war that happened a hundred-some years ago. It's about now, when media is controlled and corporate greed overrides reason and ethics.
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