The Ridin' Kid from Powder River

audiobook

The Ridin' Kid from Powder River

by Henry Herbert Knibbs

EN·~11 hours·51 chapters

Chapters

51 total

The Ridin' Kid from Powder River - CHAPTER I - YOUNG PETE

17:36

CHAPTER II - FIREARMS AND NEW FORTUNES

9:49

CHAPTER III - A WARNING

18:45

[Illustration: "Say, ain't we pardners?"]

5:45

CHAPTER IV - JUSTICE

10:20

CHAPTER V - A CHANGE OF BASE

13:45

CHAPTER VI - NEW VISTAS

33:56

CHAPTER VII - PLANS

13:23

CHAPTER VIII - SOME BOOKKEEPING

13:48

CHAPTER IX - ROWDY—AND BLUE SMOKE

0:23

Description

A gritty trail winds through the high desert, where a lean, quick‑tempered horse‑trader pushes a clattering wagon of stubborn ponies, a three‑legged dog, and a lanky twelve‑year‑old boy named Pete. Pete, perched on a saddle too big for him, has learned the hard language of the trail—profanity, tobacco, and the art of coaxing nervous horses—while dreaming of a life beyond the endless dust. Though his master treats him harshly, Pete’s sharp wit and fierce loyalty to his own mutt keep him a step ahead of danger. The boy’s restless spirit sees the open range as a promise of adventure, even if his days are spent shuffling livestock and surviving on meager rations.

Near the isolated water source on Blue Mesa, old Annersley lives a solitary, steady life, tending a modest herd and protecting the only spring for miles around. When his prized horse dies, he must travel to Concho in search of a replacement, bringing him into the orbit of the wandering trader. Their meeting sets the stage for a clash of worlds—Annersley's quiet perseverance against the trader’s reckless hustle—while Pete watches, caught between the two men and the restless horizon that calls him onward.

Collections

Browse all

Details

Language

en

Duration

~11 hours (655K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Credits

Produced by Al Haines

Release date

2005-08-14

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

Henry Herbert Knibbs

Henry Herbert Knibbs

1874–1945

A writer of western stories and verse, he brought frontier color to readers even though he never worked as a cowboy himself. Born in Canada to American parents, he went on to build a long career as a novelist, short-story writer, and poet.

View all books

You may also like

Sundown Slim

Sundown Slim

by Henry Herbert Knibbs

Partners of Chance

Partners of Chance

by Henry Herbert Knibbs

Lost Farm Camp

Lost Farm Camp

by Henry Herbert Knibbs

Maurice and the bay mare

Maurice and the bay mare

by Henry Herbert Knibbs

Le Roi des Étudiants

Le Roi des Étudiants

by Vinceslas-Eugène Dick

L'influence d'un livre: Roman historique

L'influence d'un livre: Roman historique

by Philippe Aubert de Gaspé