Author: Edna Calkins Price
Publisher: RosettaBooks
ISBN: 163295379X
Category : Biography & Autobiography
Languages : en
Pages : 212
Book Description
A memoir of one young woman’s decade-long adventure with her husband in one of the most uninhabitable and inhospitable places on Earth. Raised as a well-to-do Virginia girl, Edna fell head-over-heels in love with a semi-literate and restless young man whose dreams of adventure and freedom were as wide as the California sky. “I can’t take a soft life,” he told his bride. “It rots a man.” Thus began an uncommon love story. For ten happy years, 1931 to 1941, Edna and Bill Price abandoned city life and roamed sun-scorched Death Valley and the Arizona badlands on foot with their string of pack burros. They slept under the stars, scratched out a meager living from the wasteland, and hobnobbed with prospectors, outlaws, herders and hobos. “In this place,” Bill explained, “a man can find his God.” Far from feeling displaced, Edna thrived as a desert flower. In her extraordinary memoir, a jewel of Western Americana, Edna writes with wit and grit, recalling “those years when we knew no bed but the ground, no roof but the sky, when we were known all over the deserts simply as Burro Bill and Mrs. Bill.”
Burro Bill and Me
Author: Edna Calkins Price
Publisher: RosettaBooks
ISBN: 163295379X
Category : Biography & Autobiography
Languages : en
Pages : 212
Book Description
A memoir of one young woman’s decade-long adventure with her husband in one of the most uninhabitable and inhospitable places on Earth. Raised as a well-to-do Virginia girl, Edna fell head-over-heels in love with a semi-literate and restless young man whose dreams of adventure and freedom were as wide as the California sky. “I can’t take a soft life,” he told his bride. “It rots a man.” Thus began an uncommon love story. For ten happy years, 1931 to 1941, Edna and Bill Price abandoned city life and roamed sun-scorched Death Valley and the Arizona badlands on foot with their string of pack burros. They slept under the stars, scratched out a meager living from the wasteland, and hobnobbed with prospectors, outlaws, herders and hobos. “In this place,” Bill explained, “a man can find his God.” Far from feeling displaced, Edna thrived as a desert flower. In her extraordinary memoir, a jewel of Western Americana, Edna writes with wit and grit, recalling “those years when we knew no bed but the ground, no roof but the sky, when we were known all over the deserts simply as Burro Bill and Mrs. Bill.”
Publisher: RosettaBooks
ISBN: 163295379X
Category : Biography & Autobiography
Languages : en
Pages : 212
Book Description
A memoir of one young woman’s decade-long adventure with her husband in one of the most uninhabitable and inhospitable places on Earth. Raised as a well-to-do Virginia girl, Edna fell head-over-heels in love with a semi-literate and restless young man whose dreams of adventure and freedom were as wide as the California sky. “I can’t take a soft life,” he told his bride. “It rots a man.” Thus began an uncommon love story. For ten happy years, 1931 to 1941, Edna and Bill Price abandoned city life and roamed sun-scorched Death Valley and the Arizona badlands on foot with their string of pack burros. They slept under the stars, scratched out a meager living from the wasteland, and hobnobbed with prospectors, outlaws, herders and hobos. “In this place,” Bill explained, “a man can find his God.” Far from feeling displaced, Edna thrived as a desert flower. In her extraordinary memoir, a jewel of Western Americana, Edna writes with wit and grit, recalling “those years when we knew no bed but the ground, no roof but the sky, when we were known all over the deserts simply as Burro Bill and Mrs. Bill.”
Pilgrims in the Desert
Author: Le Hayes
Publisher: Mojave Historical Society
ISBN: 9780918614162
Category : Baker (Calif.)
Languages : en
Pages : 316
Book Description
Publisher: Mojave Historical Society
ISBN: 9780918614162
Category : Baker (Calif.)
Languages : en
Pages : 316
Book Description
The Pacific Monthly
Author: William Bittle Wells
Publisher:
ISBN:
Category : Pacific States
Languages : en
Pages : 808
Book Description
Publisher:
ISBN:
Category : Pacific States
Languages : en
Pages : 808
Book Description
Whoa You Donkey . . . WHOA!
Author: Laura Leveque
Publisher: Jackass Junction Publishing
ISBN: 0977644405
Category : Biography & Autobiography
Languages : en
Pages : 158
Book Description
Whoa you donkey...WHOA! is humor columnist Jackass Jill's collected true tales of mining camps and donkey trails. This modern day gold prospector, treasure hunter and mineral collector, chronicles misadventures with her donkey companions, Willy and Shaggy, in remote ghost towns and mining districts of the frontier west. Guaranteed a fun read for anyone who loves outdoor adventure, animals and eccentric characters.
Publisher: Jackass Junction Publishing
ISBN: 0977644405
Category : Biography & Autobiography
Languages : en
Pages : 158
Book Description
Whoa you donkey...WHOA! is humor columnist Jackass Jill's collected true tales of mining camps and donkey trails. This modern day gold prospector, treasure hunter and mineral collector, chronicles misadventures with her donkey companions, Willy and Shaggy, in remote ghost towns and mining districts of the frontier west. Guaranteed a fun read for anyone who loves outdoor adventure, animals and eccentric characters.
Journey to Rhyolite
Author: Steve Bartholomew
Publisher: NorlightsPress
ISBN: 1935254057
Category : Fiction
Languages : en
Pages : 148
Book Description
Nathaniel had good reason to make the journey to Rhyolite, fastest-growing boom town in the West. Here he hoped to find what was taken from him. The snallygaster, subject of an old legend from the back hills of Maryland, stole away Annabel, the love of his life. Now he was in Rhyolite to make his fortune and find Annabelle.
Publisher: NorlightsPress
ISBN: 1935254057
Category : Fiction
Languages : en
Pages : 148
Book Description
Nathaniel had good reason to make the journey to Rhyolite, fastest-growing boom town in the West. Here he hoped to find what was taken from him. The snallygaster, subject of an old legend from the back hills of Maryland, stole away Annabel, the love of his life. Now he was in Rhyolite to make his fortune and find Annabelle.
Lizards on the Mantel, Burros at the Door
Author: Etta Koch
Publisher: University of Texas Press
ISBN: 9780292788428
Category : Travel
Languages : en
Pages : 220
Book Description
A warm, witty memoir of a young family’s rugged adventure living in the newly established Big Bend National Park in the 1940s. A woman who went West with her husband in the 1840s must have expected hardships and privation, but during the 1940s, when Etta Koch stopped off in Big Bend with her young family and a twenty-three-foot travel trailer in tow—which they named Porky, the Road Hog—she anticipated a brief, civilized camping trip between her old home in Ohio and a new one in Arizona. It was only when she found herself moving into an old rock house without plumbing or electricity in the new Big Bend National Park that Etta realized she’d left her sheltered life behind for an experience in frontier living. In this book based on her journals and letters, Etta Koch and her daughter June Cooper Price chronicle their family’s first years—1944–1946—in the Big Bend. Etta describes how her photographer husband Peter Koch became captivated by the region as a place for natural history filmmaking—and how she and their three young daughters slowly adapted to a pioneer lifestyle during his months-long absences on the photo-lecture circuit. In vivid, often humorous anecdotes, she describes making the rock house into a home, getting to know the Park Service personnel and other neighbors, coping with the local wildlife, and, most of all, learning to love the rugged landscape and the hardy individuals who call it home.
Publisher: University of Texas Press
ISBN: 9780292788428
Category : Travel
Languages : en
Pages : 220
Book Description
A warm, witty memoir of a young family’s rugged adventure living in the newly established Big Bend National Park in the 1940s. A woman who went West with her husband in the 1840s must have expected hardships and privation, but during the 1940s, when Etta Koch stopped off in Big Bend with her young family and a twenty-three-foot travel trailer in tow—which they named Porky, the Road Hog—she anticipated a brief, civilized camping trip between her old home in Ohio and a new one in Arizona. It was only when she found herself moving into an old rock house without plumbing or electricity in the new Big Bend National Park that Etta realized she’d left her sheltered life behind for an experience in frontier living. In this book based on her journals and letters, Etta Koch and her daughter June Cooper Price chronicle their family’s first years—1944–1946—in the Big Bend. Etta describes how her photographer husband Peter Koch became captivated by the region as a place for natural history filmmaking—and how she and their three young daughters slowly adapted to a pioneer lifestyle during his months-long absences on the photo-lecture circuit. In vivid, often humorous anecdotes, she describes making the rock house into a home, getting to know the Park Service personnel and other neighbors, coping with the local wildlife, and, most of all, learning to love the rugged landscape and the hardy individuals who call it home.
My Uncle Bill and his Love Everest
Author: Peter Jalesh
Publisher: BookRix
ISBN: 3730920219
Category : Fiction
Languages : en
Pages : 460
Book Description
The novel portrays three main characters in pursuit of their dreams. The main character is Molly, a woman that becomes a jockey and pursues her dream to win the Triple Crown derbies trophy. As the story evolves she proves to have an enormous resilience in the face of a disabling illness that affects her life and her career. What becomes predominant in Molly’s quest for glory is the tie between her and the champion horse. Their love for each other – either in good fortune or in tragedy - reaches further than their aspirations to achieve glory. The next character in line is Uncle Bill, who comes to realize one day that his life lacks a higher purpose. To make up for it he designs an ultimate adventure for himself which he calls “Project Everest”. Eventually Uncle Bill goes and climbs Mt. Everest and never returns from there. Reaching that peak becomes an end in itself. Did Uncle Bill succeed to arrive at that peak? Later on, a salvage team finds on the mountain peak Uncle Bill’s watch, hidden under a rock. What belongs to a larger than life story is that Uncle Bill’s preparation for climbing Mt. Everest becomes a vital activity at all population levels. It looks as if each life prepares itself to help Uncle Bill triumph over defiance. What Uncle Bill’s project proves to others is that conquering the impossible is a human trait that belongs to all of us, an aspiration of all of us to overcome the impossible. The third character that gathers attention is the teen author that lives though those events and discovers what love is. The background of the story is made up of farmlands, a bunch of neighboring farms on which the principal activity is growing animals like pigs, burrows and thoroughbred studs. It is not difficult to interpret the motives interleaved by the story as being symbolic. Molly’s desire to win the Triple Crown begins with a fortunate chance and ends with another chance – an unfortunate one, an accidental chance. Uncle’s Bill’s climbing of Mt. Everest is the result of a careful planning that ends in an illusive victory. Both fates described above are metaphors. The sense implied here is that the pursuit of fame, success, and victory is beyond life. That is, happiness is doomed to failure in the quest of the impossible; also that the boundaries of what is given to us to live are finite, prone to chance and accident.
Publisher: BookRix
ISBN: 3730920219
Category : Fiction
Languages : en
Pages : 460
Book Description
The novel portrays three main characters in pursuit of their dreams. The main character is Molly, a woman that becomes a jockey and pursues her dream to win the Triple Crown derbies trophy. As the story evolves she proves to have an enormous resilience in the face of a disabling illness that affects her life and her career. What becomes predominant in Molly’s quest for glory is the tie between her and the champion horse. Their love for each other – either in good fortune or in tragedy - reaches further than their aspirations to achieve glory. The next character in line is Uncle Bill, who comes to realize one day that his life lacks a higher purpose. To make up for it he designs an ultimate adventure for himself which he calls “Project Everest”. Eventually Uncle Bill goes and climbs Mt. Everest and never returns from there. Reaching that peak becomes an end in itself. Did Uncle Bill succeed to arrive at that peak? Later on, a salvage team finds on the mountain peak Uncle Bill’s watch, hidden under a rock. What belongs to a larger than life story is that Uncle Bill’s preparation for climbing Mt. Everest becomes a vital activity at all population levels. It looks as if each life prepares itself to help Uncle Bill triumph over defiance. What Uncle Bill’s project proves to others is that conquering the impossible is a human trait that belongs to all of us, an aspiration of all of us to overcome the impossible. The third character that gathers attention is the teen author that lives though those events and discovers what love is. The background of the story is made up of farmlands, a bunch of neighboring farms on which the principal activity is growing animals like pigs, burrows and thoroughbred studs. It is not difficult to interpret the motives interleaved by the story as being symbolic. Molly’s desire to win the Triple Crown begins with a fortunate chance and ends with another chance – an unfortunate one, an accidental chance. Uncle’s Bill’s climbing of Mt. Everest is the result of a careful planning that ends in an illusive victory. Both fates described above are metaphors. The sense implied here is that the pursuit of fame, success, and victory is beyond life. That is, happiness is doomed to failure in the quest of the impossible; also that the boundaries of what is given to us to live are finite, prone to chance and accident.
The Basket, Or, The Journal of the Basket Fraternity Or Lovers of Indian Baskets and Other Good Things
Author:
Publisher:
ISBN:
Category : Baskets
Languages : en
Pages : 396
Book Description
Publisher:
ISBN:
Category : Baskets
Languages : en
Pages : 396
Book Description
The Basket
Author:
Publisher:
ISBN:
Category : Baskets
Languages : en
Pages : 76
Book Description
Publisher:
ISBN:
Category : Baskets
Languages : en
Pages : 76
Book Description
Western Field
Author:
Publisher:
ISBN:
Category :
Languages : en
Pages : 814
Book Description
Publisher:
ISBN:
Category :
Languages : en
Pages : 814
Book Description