Seeking Pleasure in the Old West
David Dary
364 pages, 110 photos and drawings, 6 x 9
Paper ISBN 978-0-7006-0828-7, $14.95
WINNER OF THE 1995 WESTERN WRITERS OF AMERICA'S SPUR AWARD
FOR BEST WESTERN NONFICTION
"Pioneering Americans of
the nineteenth century did not merely rush for gold, lust for
land, and thrust aside the West's original inhabitants. These
mountain men, cowboys, homesteaders, and cavalry troopers played
nearly as hard as they worked, exploiting to the hilt what little
leisure they could steal from their labors. Nor did they only
carouse--drink, gamble, and womanize--as the West's fiction might
suggest. They were spectators at bull and bear fights in California;
actors in amateur theatricals in Army garrisons; and participants
in communal barn raisings and quilting bees on the prairie. This
is a delightful look at a very neglected aspect of the story
of westering Americans."--Richard H. Dillon, author
of Meriwether Lewis, Fool's Gold, and The Legend of Grizzly
Adams
"The men on Lewis and Clark's 1804 expedition square-danced
to fiddle music. Cowboys' leisure pursuits included singing,
storytelling, dominoes, reading, and foot races. U.S. Army soldiers
played the newfangled game of baseball and even enjoyed debating
and attending concerts. Dary's irresistible narrative recreates
card games on Mississippi steamboats, New Orleans balls, frontier
campfires and cafe-theatres, Santa Fe saloons, and Wyoming bicycle
clubs and mineral spas, and it charts the emergence of a middle
class that came to disapprove of prostitution, gambling, drinking,
bear-baiting, and buffalo-hunting. An engaging chronicle."--Publishers
Weekly
"As David Dary proves in this pleasurable book, the Old
West was not all trouble and toil. Much is to be learned here-from
mountain men and Indians to cowboys and homesteaders-about how
to have fun, no matter the circumstances."--Dee Brown,
author of Bury My Heart at Wounded Knee
"This lively and good-humored narrative takes the reader
on a journey to a time before pleasure ruled lives, a time when
fun was where you found it and was what you did when you had
time."--Dallas Morning News
"This delightful volume describes activities ranging
from the simple and the homespun to the bawdy and elaborate."--Booklist
"A treasury of the colorful characters who spent their
brief hour on that wild and woolly stage."--Kansas
City Star
DAVID DARY is head of the School of Journalism at the
University of Oklahoma. He is the author of several books on
the West, including Red Blood and Black
Ink: Journalism in the Old West, Entrepreneurs
of the Old West, True Tales
of Old-Time Kansas, More True Tales
of Old-Time Kansas, and the classic Cowboy
Culture, and is the recipient of many awards, including
the Cowboy Hall of Fame Wrangler Award, the Western Writers of
America's Spur Award, and the Westerners International Award.
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