The Gunfighter: Man or Myth?

by Joseph G. Rosa

Paper Book, 1973

Status

Available

Call number

363.2

Collection

Publication

University of Oklahoma Press (1973), Hardcover, 229 pages

Description

The gunfighter was a man bred in a lawless and violent era of civil war, range wars, and greed for land and gold. He played a real and deadly part in a period when men were conditioned to settle differences with gunplay. He shot and fought and killed throughout Texas in its struggle with Mexico, along the Kansas-Missouri border, and up and down the cattle trails. Black powder smoke from his guns darkened the Kansas cow towns and the Far West mining camps.  What part of the gunfighter legend is true, and what part a novelist's or screenwriter's fantasy? What has been the gunfighter's influence on American society-and. for that matter, on world society? For there is no doubt that the shoot-?em-up gun-totin? hero of the early West is a figure of interest and sympathy to people all over the world. Well documented and rich with illustrations of gunfights and gunmen, this book is a real find for "gunfighter buffs," as well as for all readers interested in knowing what the wild West was really like.… (more)

User reviews

LibraryThing member DinadansFriend
This is a book about real gunfighters, and whether or not anyone ever pursued gun fighting, as a professional occupation. Mr. Rosa is aware that some men, a small number, were violent, and participated in more than one incident involving guns, but the free-lance gunfighter for hire...is a myth.
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Lawmen were a different breed, but gun fighting outside of law-enforcement, a very rare activity.
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LibraryThing member untraveller
Interesting, but I think his ´myths’ had some stereotypical basis in fact. I enjoyed most the author’s dissertation on weapons, their accuracy, trajectory, and deviation. Finished 16.04.2021.

Language

Physical description

229 p.; 6.2 inches

ISBN

0806108258 / 9780806108254
Page: 1.186 seconds