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Tombstone - (Historians of the Frontier and American West) by Walter Noble Burns (Paperback)
About this item
Highlights
- First published in 1927, Tombstone defined the legend of lawman-gunfighter Wyatt Earp.
- Author(s): Walter Noble Burns
- 412 Pages
- History, United States
- Series Name: Historians of the Frontier and American West
Description
About the Book
A mixture of fact and fiction, this is the book that defined Wyatt Earp's legend as a gunfighter-lawman.Book Synopsis
First published in 1927, Tombstone defined the legend of lawman-gunfighter Wyatt Earp. A mixture of fact and fiction, Walter Noble Burns's portrayal of Earp has profoundly influenced subsequent generations of historians, novelists, and screen writers. Born in 1849, Earp grew up on the Missouri-Kansas frontier and first came to notice as a no-nonsense town marshal in rip-roaring Dodge City, Kansas. Moving to wide-open Tombstone, Arizona in 1879, he became a businessman and deputy United States marshal where he was soon joined by his four brothers. In Burns's narrative, the Earp clan represents law and order in the lawless, chaotic Old West. The collision between civilization and frontier explodes in the bloody and legendary shootout at the OK Corral between the Earps and the Clanton-McLowery gang. The Earps prevailed, but the subsequent shootings of two Earp brothers drove the calm, courageous, and somewhat emotionless Wyatt to take the law into his own hands. In a personal rage, he hunted and killed the treacherous "assassins." Wyatt Earp's most recent biographer, Casey Tefertiller, discusses the influence of Tombstone on the history and legend of Wyatt Earp and the Old West.
Review Quotes
. . . a mixture of fact and fiction . . . the basis for later novels and movies.
. . . the author Ýhas¨ done extensive research . . . The result Ýis¨ the most historically correct account for several years. . . . surprisingly complete in detail.
. . . unique in that it includes a personal perspective about Tombstone from Wyatt Earp himself. . . . Truth or fiction, this is an interesting book and one not to be overlooked by the treasure hunters of the American West.
." . . a mixture of fact and fiction . . . the basis for later novels and movies."