
In this vivid memoir the narrator follows the legendary Buffalo Jones, a hard‑wonched frontiersman who has spent a lifetime rescuing the great American bison from extinction. Driven by a deep‑seated reverence for the wild, Jones shuns the gun in favor of rope and patience, turning the plains into a sanctuary where buffalo roam alongside mustangs, deer, and the occasional curious coyote. The story opens on a stark Arizona desert camp, where the crackle of fire and the hush of night set the stage for a rugged adventure.
As the party—Mormon guides, wandering Navajo, and the stoic Jones—pushes deeper into the canyon country, the narrative paints the landscape in sweeping colors: yellow crags, towering pines, and blue‑bell‑dotted valleys. Through the narrator’s eyes, listeners hear the rustle of sage, feel the chill of desert winds, and sense the quiet determination of a man whose very presence seems to command respect from the untamed world around him.
Language
en
Duration
~6 hours (387K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by Mary Starr. HTML version by Al Haines.
Release date
2000-02-01
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1872–1939
Best known for turning the American West into fast-moving adventure stories, he helped shape the popular Western novel for generations of readers. Before becoming a full-time writer, he trained and worked as a dentist, then went on to publish dozens of books and become one of the genre’s biggest names.
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