
The story opens on the sun‑bleached plains of Arizona, where the railroad scar cuts across endless mesas and the distant hills rise like ancient fortresses. The land is painted in vivid detail—grassy valleys, wind‑scoured buttes, and the quiet presence of Apache hunters tracing old trails. This rugged backdrop shapes a cast of men who move with the weight of the open sky, their lives as solid and unadorned as the stone around them.
Sundown Slim, a lanky wanderer who has spent his life cooking in hotels, camps and even the occasional high‑society kitchen, finds himself thrust from a locked boxcar into the dusty town of Antelope. A grizzled cowboy opens the door for him, and their banter quickly reveals Slim’s sharp wit, love of poetry, and recent fallout with the Tie‑Walkers’ Union over his outspoken verses. As he steps onto the mesa, Slim senses both the promise of adventure and the harsh realities of frontier life, setting the stage for a tale of humor, hardship, and the search for a place to call home.
Language
en
Duration
~7 hours (414K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by Al Haines
Release date
2005-07-20
Rights
Public domain in the USA.
Subjects
1874–1945
A lively voice of the American West, he wrote poems, stories, and novels filled with open ranges, horses, and hard-traveled lives. His work helped shape the flavor of early 20th-century Western literature, even though he was known especially as a poet.
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