Photo de l'auteur

Ernest Haycox (1899–1950)

Auteur de The Adventurers

124+ oeuvres 996 utilisateurs 9 critiques

A propos de l'auteur

Ernest Haycox was born in Portland, Oregon on October 1, 1899. He graduated with a degree in journalism from the University of Oregon. During his lifetime, he wrote more than 20 novels, most of which were first serialized in Collier's Magazine or The Saturday Evening Post, and more than 300 short afficher plus stories. His works include Trouble Shooter, The Earthbreakers, and The Adventurers. Several of his novels were adapted into movies including Stagecoach, Union Pacific, and Canyon Passage. He died from cancer on October 13, 1950 at the age of 51. (Bowker Author Biography) afficher moins
Crédit image: The Nostalgia League

Œuvres de Ernest Haycox

The Adventurers (1954) 80 exemplaires
Bugles in the Afternoon (1944) 74 exemplaires
Deep West (1937) 38 exemplaires
Long Storm (1946) 37 exemplaires
Trail Town (1941) 36 exemplaires
Canyon Passage (1945) 36 exemplaires
The Wild Bunch (1943) 34 exemplaires
Alder Gulch (1941) 34 exemplaires
Four Great Novels of the West (1994) 31 exemplaires
Rim of the Desert (1940) 31 exemplaires
The Border Trumpet (1939) 30 exemplaires
Action By Night (1943) 29 exemplaires
Man in the Saddle (1938) 26 exemplaires
Trail Smoke (1964) 26 exemplaires
Sundown Jim (1948) 26 exemplaires
Saddle and Ride (1940) 23 exemplaires
Starlight Rider (1933) 23 exemplaires
The Earthbreakers (1952) 22 exemplaires
Stagecoach (1973) 19 exemplaires
A Rider of the High Mesa (1955) 17 exemplaires
Free Grass (1929) 16 exemplaires
Trouble Shooter (1937) 16 exemplaires
The Silver Desert (1961) 15 exemplaires
Riders West (1961) 15 exemplaires
Chaffee of Roaring Horse (1973) 14 exemplaires
Whispering Range (1973) 14 exemplaires
The Feudists (1959) 14 exemplaires
Return of a Fighter (1965) 13 exemplaires
Burnt Creek (1900) 11 exemplaires
Secret River (1955) 10 exemplaires
Head of the Mountain (1952) 10 exemplaires
Dead man range 10 exemplaires
New Hope (1998) 9 exemplaires
Murder on the Frontier (1996) 7 exemplaires
Trigger Trio (1959) 6 exemplaires
Guns of Fury (1967) 6 exemplaires
The last rodeo (1949) 6 exemplaires
Sixgun Duo (1990) 6 exemplaires
On the Prod (1957) 5 exemplaires
Frank Peace, Trouble Shooter (1963) 5 exemplaires
Born to Conquer (1999) 4 exemplaires
Prairie Guns (1956) 4 exemplaires
Best Western Stories (1960) 4 exemplaires
Guns Up (1972) 4 exemplaires
Les Pionniers (2021) 4 exemplaires
Clint (1966) 4 exemplaires
Wipe Out the Brierlys (1972) 4 exemplaires
Invitation By Bullet 3 exemplaires
Outlaw 2 exemplaires
Rawhide Range (1959) 2 exemplaires
Powder Smoke and Other Stories (1966) 2 exemplaires
Brand Fires on the Ridge (1990) 2 exemplaires
Grim Canyon 2 exemplaires
The Man from Montana (1964) 2 exemplaires
One Star by Night 1 exemplaire
Old Glory 1 exemplaire
Good Marriage 1 exemplaire
Fourth Son 1 exemplaire
Farewell to the Years 1 exemplaire
Fandango 1 exemplaire
Dolorosa, Here I Come 1 exemplaire
Rule by Power 1 exemplaire
Dead-Man Trail 1 exemplaire
A Day in Town 1 exemplaire
Custom of the Country 1 exemplaire
Breed of the Frontier 1 exemplaire
Blizzard Camp 1 exemplaire
At Wolf Creek Tavern 1 exemplaire
Over the Straits 1 exemplaire
One More River 1 exemplaire
Ryttare i natten 1 exemplaire
The Storm Raider 1 exemplaire
Canyon Pasage 1 exemplaire
Rauhe Justiz. 1 exemplaire
Lone Rider 1 exemplaire
The Roaring Hour 1 exemplaire
Clouds on the Circle P (1995) 1 exemplaire
Gun Talk 1 exemplaire
Pioneer loves (1997) 1 exemplaire
Rough Justice (1976) 1 exemplaire
Na Velké Pacifické (1995) 1 exemplaire
Fighting Man (1994) 1 exemplaire
The Grim Canyon (1953) 1 exemplaire
Frontier Blood (1974) 1 exemplaire
Rugged Alaska Stories 1 exemplaire
By rope and lead (1976) 1 exemplaire
A Question of Blood 1 exemplaire
Stubborn People 1 exemplaire
Call This Land Home 1 exemplaire
Prairie Yule 1 exemplaire
Cry Deep, Cry Still 1 exemplaire
No Time for Dreams 1 exemplaire
Rock-Bound Honesty 1 exemplaire
False Face 1 exemplaire
The Drums Roll 1 exemplaire
A Battle Piece 1 exemplaire
The Silver Saddle 1 exemplaire
Things Remembered 1 exemplaire

Oeuvres associées

75 Short Masterpieces: Stories from the World's Literature (1961) — Contributeur — 298 exemplaires
Stagecoach (1939) — Original story — 185 exemplaires
A Century of Great Western Stories-An Anthology of Western Fiction (2000) — Contributeur — 104 exemplaires
The Arbor House Treasury of Great Western Stories (1982) — Contributeur — 102 exemplaires
Great Tales of the American West (1945) — Contributeur — 45 exemplaires
Great Tales of the West (1982) — Contributeur — 30 exemplaires
Half-a-Hundred Stories for Men, Great Tales by American Writers (1945) — Contributeur — 15 exemplaires
The Saturday Evening Post Stories 1948 (1948) — Contributeur — 4 exemplaires
The Best Short Short Stories from Collier's (1948) — Contributeur — 3 exemplaires
Rex Lardner Selects the Best of Sports Fiction — Contributeur — 2 exemplaires
Stagecoach Booklet (Criterion Collection 516) — Contributeur — 1 exemplaire

Étiqueté

Partage des connaissances

Nom canonique
Haycox, Ernest
Nom légal
Haycox, Ernest James
Date de naissance
1899-10-01
Date de décès
1950-10-13
Sexe
male
Nationalité
USA
Lieu de naissance
Portland, Oregon, USA
Études
University of Oregon
Professions
author
screenwriter

Membres

Critiques

Well, I read this one in a single sitting. I enjoyed this one. It starts tense, erupts into a very long-pitched battle, and moves into the Western tropes I dig. Although, perhaps if the first few pages had been shortened by a few paragraphs the speed and intensity might have been pushed up a notch. I dunno. There is the cliché outsmarting the bad guys using the land part of the story, but no marks against it, I actually like this sort of thing, and the outcome was somewhat in question as I was going along (even though I know how most of these that are not grimdark end). There is an instance of chauvinism put into the mouth of the virtuous woman (trope) though, “a woman can’t help being weak. I don’t blame your men for not wanting me along.” Outside of this, there’s not anything else in this book that’s a collar tugger.
I would recommend this one if you’re looking for a fast-moving western story with minimum romance (the basic outline of one with that resolution left for after the ending), a tense opening, and plenty of gunfighting.
… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
Ranjr | Mar 15, 2024 |
Good as far as it goes, this wild West short story from 1937 can be a fun read. Ernest Haycox, an Oregon native, wrote many Western stories and clearly loved the genre. The prose is a little purple. (I would guess the author was drunk when he wrote much of it.) The point of view shifts from character to character too much. The Western characters are a bit clichéd: A hooker with a heart of gold is matched by a gunslinger with a heart of gold, and a colorful coachman, a gambler, an army officer's fiancée and a "drummer"--which means a liquor salesman--round out the cast, most without being particularly memorable.

The point of the story is that this kind of travel was extremely uncomfortable and dangerous. The author makes that point vividly. One of the otherwise colorless characters is most vivid and human in the way he dies (though, from what, exactly, we don't know!).

The story is historically difficult to place in a particular year or even decade. The principal, long-distance stage lines pretty much went out of business by 1869, soon replaced by railroads, but I am not sure about local stagecoach lines. The stagecoach in this story goes from a village called Tonto, Arizona (maybe in central Arizona? Gila County?) to the town of Lordsburg, on the southwestern edge of New Mexico. (A possible reason for such a route might have been that New Mexico had railroads before Arizona, and Lordsburg, relatively speaking, had one of the earliest train stations.)

A reference to Geronimo being on the warpath probably places this story no earlier than the 1870s and definitely no later than 1886 when Geronimo was captured for about the fifth and last time. There is also a reference in this story to "Al Schrieber's ranch," and there was a historical person named Al Sieber (but notice the difference in the names) who, from about 1868 to 1871, managed (but did not own) a ranch near Prescott, Arizona (which is nowhere near Lordsburg, New Mexico, as is the ranch in this story); but the difference in the names suggests that Haycox is being evocative here rather than informative.

Still, the lack of very many identifying historical references in this short story makes historical placement less problematic than is the case with the 1939 movie, "Stagecoach," which is based on this story. While the short story is sparing in its use of specific historical details, the movie gives so many historical details that, eventually, they become contradictory.

A few examples of Haycox's hypervivid prose are evinced in my notes on the text. I don't say his style is without charm, as when the author describes the dust falling off the rolling wheels of the coach as being like water--exactly the opposite substances standing in for each other: dust and water. It works there.
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Signalé
MilesFowler | Jul 16, 2023 |
OK western novel about Custer fight, etc. Have not seen the movie.
 
Signalé
kslade | Dec 8, 2022 |
I haven't read a lot of Westerns - I think Shane was the last, back in High School. So not a lot to compare this to.

I was surprised by several things about this novel, first published in 1939.

First was the prose style, deeply involved with characters' inner states and emotions, and oddly indirect. People seem to express many things with their eyes and the twitching of their lips. Paragraphs of internal monologue jump from image to image and, in some places, leave the reader to interpret exatly what is going on.

Second was the focus on character rather than action. A mosaic of intense and intriguing characters spend many pages observing each other, speculating on each other, and, in true Victorian fashion, struggling to express or suppress their powerful feelings about each other. I was involved and entertained by this drawing room drama, reminiscient of Thomas Hardy or Anthony Trollope.

In fact -- again strange for a Western -- the action scenes were the most uninvolving. Fist fights and gun fights seem poorly described and fail to thrill. Near the end is a long stretch of chase, hunt, flight and battle over intricately described terrain that left me mostly confused and bored.

Overall I enjoyed the novel very much, but almost felt that the writer, by style and temperament, would be more at home writing a romance than a western.



… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
JackMassa | Nov 23, 2016 |

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Statistiques

Œuvres
124
Aussi par
15
Membres
996
Popularité
#25,871
Évaluation
½ 3.7
Critiques
9
ISBN
253
Langues
6

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