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Overview

This classic novel, first published in 1906 and based on Mary Austin's own experiences, captures the way of life of shepherds in the Sierra. Austin blends natural history, politics, and allegory in a genre-blurring narrative, championing local shepherds in their losing battle against the quickly developing tourist business in the Western Sierra during the nineteenth century. Austin had met many shepherds while visiting the Tejon ranches of Edward Beale and Henry Miller, and cultivated relationships with men others often thought of as ignorant, unambitious, and dirty, listening closely to their stories. Her neighbors were scandalized, but Austin respected the shepherds’ ways of thinking. Rather than portray these shepherds’ lives as part of a romantic bygone era, in this novel, she instead positions them as exemplifying potentially radical ways of living in and thinking about the world. Afterword by Barney Nelson.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780874177541
Publisher: University of Nevada Press
Publication date: 01/01/2001
Series: Western Literature and Fiction Series
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 328
File size: 6 MB

About the Author

Mary Austin (1868-1934) wrote more than 30 books during her career, including Land of Little Rain(1903) and Lost Borders (1909). Born in Carlinsville, Illinois, Mary Austin eventually ventured west with her brother and widowed mother to homestead in California. Throughout her essays, poems, plays, and stories, she focused on environmental issues and the relationship between individual experience and cultural histories.

Table of Contents

Cover Page Title Page Copyright Page Table of Contents I. The Coming of the Flocks II. The Sun in Aries III. A Shearing IV. The Hireling Shepherd V. The Long Trail VI. The Open Range VII. The Flock VIII. The Go-Betweens IX. The Strife of the Herdsmen X. Liers-in-Wait XI. The Sheep and the Reserves XII. Ranchos Tejon XIII. The Shade of the Arrows Afterword by Barney Nelson Notes Works Cited CIP Data
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