
A young boy’s recollections paint a vivid picture of life on the frontier after the Civil War. He recalls his family’s desperate move from Georgia to Texas, the thin line between poverty and survival, and the constant threat of foraging troops that roamed the countryside. Through his mother’s cleverness and his own daring—like the heart‑pounding moment when a soldier’s bell nearly exposed him while he tended the herd—the narrative captures the raw tension of protecting prized cattle in a war‑torn landscape.
The memoir then shifts to the return of his father, a Confederate veteran, whose homecoming on a humble mule becomes a moment of quiet triumph for the children. Their modest log cabin, the buzzing canebrake, and the ever‑present sound of a bell become symbols of resilience and the stubborn hope that drives them forward. Listeners are invited into an intimate world where ordinary chores turn heroic, and the everyday struggles of a post‑war family unfold against the vast, unforgiving plains.
Language
en
Duration
~9 hours (532K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Keith M. Eckrich, and the PG Online Distributed Proofreaders Team
Release date
2004-07-01
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1859–1935
Drawn from years on cattle trails rather than romantic myth, his western stories feel lived-in, dusty, and real. Best known for The Log of a Cowboy (1903), he helped preserve the everyday world of the late frontier in plain, vivid prose.
View all books