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North Star: A Barnaby Skye Novel (Barnaby Skye Novels)
 
 
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North Star: A Barnaby Skye Novel (Barnaby Skye Novels) [Hardcover]

Richard S. Wheeler (Author)
4.3 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)

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Book Description

Barnaby Skye Novels March 3, 2009
There is a season for all things. . .
 
For Barnaby Skye, legendary guide and man of the borders, it is time to start a new life. For Skye's younger wife, the beautiful Shoshone woman he calls Mary, it is time to find the beloved son she has not seen in seven years. For Skye's half-blood son, North Star, it is time to discover who he is. And for Skye's older Crow wife, Victoria, the whole world is spinning out of control.
 
In this sweeping novel of the early West, Skye and his wives and son cope with radical change as the wilderness vanishes, the buffalo are slaughtered, and the government puts the tribes on reservation lands. How can people born and bred to tribal life learn to live another way?
 
Their struggle takes the Skyes from the Crazy Mountains in Montana to St. Louis and the Wind River Reservation in Wyoming, wrestling with the tide of settlers and the new settlements that dot the western plains and mountains - a tide that leaves no good place for a veteran borders man with two Indian wives and a mixed-blood son.
 
 

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Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

Prolific writer Wheeler has penned more than 60 westerns. This, the 17th novel in his Skye's West series featuring venerable mountain man Barnaby Skye, finds Skye—after more than 50 years of trapping beaver, hunting bear, fighting Indians and living outdoors—in constant rheumatic pain, losing his eyesight and wishing to live out his days in a house with a roof, a floor and a real bed. It is 1870, the fur business is dead and white men are taking all the Indian lands. His two Indian wives, Victoria and Mary, have different feelings about these changes. Victoria dreads leaving her Indian family for a white man's life, and Mary longs to see her son, Dirk, whom Skye had sent away to school several years earlier. There is little gun smoke, but plenty of suspense as Skye and Victoria confront brutal Texas cattlemen and cheating Indian agents, and Mary travels to St. Louis to find her son. Skye may be old, but he is wise and crafty. Wheeler may be at the end of the Barnaby Skye stories, but this is a fine way for the old guy to go out. (Feb.)
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

Review

"WHEELER'S westerns just keep getting better and better."--Publisher's Weekly
 
"WHEELER is a writer's writer whose prose has the authority of handset type but sparkles like horseshoes on flint rock."--Kirkus Reviews
 
"An exciting, suspenseful story with Barnaby once more facing stronger odds than any man should, but no one should count this unlikely mountain man out."--Roundup Magazine on The Fire Arrow
 
"Based on the author's considerable knowledge of the early West and driven by memorable characters, The Fire Arrow is a deftly written story of personal integrity and love."--The Denver Post and Rocky Mountain News

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 320 pages
  • Publisher: Forge Books; First Edition edition (March 3, 2009)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0765316633
  • ISBN-13: 978-0765316639
  • Product Dimensions: 8.6 x 5.6 x 1.1 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 14.4 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 4.3 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,728,418 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

Richard Wheeler began a late-in-life career as a novelist at age fifty, and by his seventy-fifth year had written seventy novels. He began life as a newsman and later became a book editor, but turned to fiction full time in 1985.

He started by writing traditional westerns but soon was writing large-scale historical novels and then biographical novels. In recent years he has been writing mysteries as well, some as Axel Brand. His Lieutenant Joe Sonntag series occurs in 1940s Milwaukee, and focuses on life in a big, smoky industrial city just after World War Two.

He has won numerous awards, including the Owen Wister Award for lifetime achievement in the literature of the American West, and also six Spur Awards from Western Writers of America. He has received more Spur Awards than any other living author.

He grew up in Wisconsin and migrated West, holding newspaper jobs in Phoenix, Oakland, Carson City, and Billings. His wife, Sue Hart, is an English professor at Montana State University in Billings.

He has been focusing more and more on biographical novels. One of these, published in March, 2010, is called Snowbound, and is about the explorer John C. Fremont's tragic fourth expedition. It won a Spur Award.


For a quarter of a century he's largely made his living from writing fiction. That reality astonishes him. In his mid-seventies now, he is still dreaming up new stories.

Note: There are other Richard Wheelers writing books. One is an historian of the Civil War, and another writes histories of the Marine Corps, and another is a social scientist. Richard S. Wheeler is the novelist.

 

Customer Reviews

3 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
4.3 out of 5 stars (3 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars NORTH STAR by Richard S. Wheeler, April 11, 2009
By 
This review is from: North Star: A Barnaby Skye Novel (Barnaby Skye Novels) (Hardcover)
The Skye novels are unique. They are a blend of the historical literary with the tall-tale dime novel. The characters--Skye particularly--are larger than life, but the beauty of the west and the context of the novels is pure literature. North Star is the 17th title and it is no exception. It is well-written, beautifully detailed, and a touch melancholy as, what feels like the final Barnaby Skye story, is told.

Mister Skye is breaking down with age. He is sixty-five. His eyesight is blurring, and his body aches from too many cold nights on the hard ground beneath his lodge. He yearns for a home: A white man's home with a wood floor, windows, a soft bed, furniture and rocking chair on the front porch. He has witnessed the west from the early days of the fur trade to the current westward expansion of the white man. It is the end an era--the west is opening up for the homesteader and rancher, but it is closing around the Indian tribes like a noose.

Skye is not a wealthy man. The fur is long since gone and there is little need for guide work in these modern times. He and his two Indian wives--Victoria and Mary--live with Victoria's Absaroka People. Skye knows money will be a problem, but he also knows he needs a home to grow old in. He also has a place in mind in the Yellowstone Valley. It is a place where the old trappers would often meet in the old days and share stories and trade goods. It is near water, there are warm springs, game and enough beauty to last forever. Unfortunately--as is usually the case--everything that can go wrong, does.

NORTH STAR is a melancholy story. It is a story about age and change, but it is also a story about returns--Skye has stayed clear of his own people. He has lived with the Indians for years, but as age captures him he has the need to return to the life his people--the white man--live: a house, a warm stove, furniture, a bed.

The story is told expertly with a weaving and sundry plotline--it isn't straight and clean, but rather it curls around Skye and his family with destiny's own uncaring and callous style. It is told in third person and the perspective changes between Skye, his wives and his son Dirk. The prose is vibrant, melancholy and often beautiful with its subtle textures and understated style:

"They reached the riverbank during a spring squall, and continued westward along a worn trail, while wrapped in good blankets. That cold night they raised the lodge and found warmth and peace within."

NORTH STAR is a tale that truly captures the spirit of the west. It is beautiful, harsh, and always dependent on the whimsy of nature. If you think the western is dead, you should read this book.

-Gravetapping
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Great Novel from an Outstanding Western Writer, February 28, 2010
By 
Darrell W. Smith (Champaign, IL USA) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
I can only echo the praise of the previous two reviewers--however I would give "North Star" five stars rather than four; I don't see how it could be improved upon. You will never go wrong with a novel by Richard S. Wheeler, who blends solid plots with accurate historical settings and complex, realistic characters. Although it is part of a series chronicling the life of Barnaby Skye, "North Star" can be read and enjoyed as a stand-alone novel. I highly recommend it, and I also recommend any of his earlier Skye novels--and any of his work, for that matter, especially his biographical novels.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars What Comes Around Comes Around, November 24, 2009
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This review is from: North Star: A Barnaby Skye Novel (Barnaby Skye Novels) (Hardcover)
"North Star" is an extraordinary novel by Richard S. Wheeler. Having written more than sixty of them, the author is among the grand masters of American historical westerns. His prose is as smooth as a velveteen piano scarf, but in this case early chapters are slow albeit beautifully written desciptions of the countryside and native American beliefs.

This most recent addition to the Skye West novels astound the reader in presenting Mister Skye and his Crow wife, Victoria, as they battle the onset of old age. Both Skye and Victoria suffer with debilitating bouts of arthritis, made more severe by the bitter cold of rain, snow, and ice in their lodge where they must sleep on the ground. Skye is further incapacitated by diminishing eyesight which radically reduces his ability to hunt and shoot animals for food. In this book, we also learn much about indigenous peoples' accommodation to death and dying, both on the part of individuals as well as tribal custom.

I was also caused to think about how very difficult the aging process would make life for those (e.g., frontiersmen and Native Americans) whose lives were spent in migratory patterns following seasons and food sources. Example: this book made me realize how miserable it would be to spend several days on a horse while suffering pains of lower back arthritis.

"North Star" is the story of Skye and his two wives, one Shoshone and one Crow, on a journey to find a place to live where they can provide for themselves in a European-style house protected from bad weather. A major feature of the book, too, is their reunion with North Star, Skye's half breed son, who has been educated by Jesuit missionaries. In this subplot, the boy's mother, Skye's Shoshone wife, makes her way to St. Louis to visit her son. This journey, too, has interesting twists and turns as the lone Indian woman makes her way without money on a trip that will take the better part of two months.

Among the great offerings of "North Star" is an understanding of the white man's changing role in ruling the country with the red man kept on reservations. A unique book, perhaps because it deals head on with an aging cowboy, married to two Indian women. Skye and his Crow wife, Victoria, who also suffers from aging, depend upon Mary, the younger Shoshone woman, to take care of them in their old age.

"North Star" is an enjoyable read, well described in the endless sky country -- an adventure from which readers will learn a great deal about the lives of indigenous peoples and the white men who come to replace them and their cultures. I highly recommend it for a place on your bedside table.
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Inside This Book (learn more)
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
blue dawn, lodge cover, grilled gate
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
North Star, Mister Skye, The Runner, Fort Laramie, Bozeman City, Colonel Bullock, Wind River, Big Road, Chief Washakie, Barnaby Skye, Major Perkins, Major Graves, Indian Bureau, Absaroka People, Big Horn Valley, Yardley Dogwood, Star That Never Moves, Yellowstone River, Miz Poontang, Fort Washakie, Big Horn River, Mister Buntline, Royal Navy, Captain Wall, Jim Bridger
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