Most Helpful Customer Reviews
|
|
5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
One of the classics of the genre, September 13, 1999
Frederick Faust (a.k.a. Max Brand and eighteen other psuedonyms) wrote and wrote and wrote and wrote -- 30 million plus words in his career -- and just about everything he turned out is worth reading. And "The Untamed" is one of his best. Forget "The Virginian" and Zane Grey's pokey novels, "The Untamed" is the fictionalized west that we know and love, where men and women were larger than life and strode across a fantasy world of death, lawlessness, and strange beauty. After reading this novel, pick any other Faust/Brand title and give it a try: I guarantee you that you won't find a dud.
|
|
|
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
The Untamed - Enjoyable, Enigmatic, Classic Western, July 5, 2005
Whistlin' Dan Berry is undoubtedly one of the most enigmatic characters in Western fiction. With uncanny abilities he controls a wild stallion, appropriately named Satan, and a ferocious wolf dog, Black Bart. Naive and easy going, Berry proves absolutely unforgiving when physically assaulted by a feared, vicious outlaw, Jim Silent. Seemingly without any moderating emotions, Whistlin' Dan is relentless in his vengeful search for Silent and his outlaw gang.
The Untamed (1919), Max Brand's first western novel, was radically different from earlier, more realistic, classic works like James Fenimore Cooper's The Prairie, Owen Wister's The Virginian, and Zane Grey's Riders of the Purple Sage. In The Untamed we readers learn little about the protagonist; his origin, his remarkable skills, and his animal-like instincts, remain shadowed in mystery.
We also have little idea where the story takes place. Brand's geography is vaguely familiar and yet is clearly fictional, even mythical. Harsh, unforgiving deserts and mountains markedly shape the character and code of his fictional ranchers, heroes, and outlaws. There is an accepted definition of honor, right, and wrong, but fundamentally, all must find ways to survive in this rugged environment.
Max Brand's westerns may not meet the criteria of great literature, but The Untamed is certainly good pulp fiction. Brand's enigmatic Whistlin' Dan Berry warrants your acquaintance.
My hard cover edition of The Untamed is a publication of the University of Nebraska Press. It includes a short, interesting introduction by William A. Bloodworth, Jr. He is the author of Max Brand (New York: Twayne Publishers, 1993), a biographical examination of Brand's fascinating career.
Max Brand, the best known pseudonym of Frederick Faust, created more than 300 western novels.
|
|
|
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Great escapism, October 31, 2002
Yes, this book set the style and standard for the Western genre for years to come. Modern book/films such as Larry McMurtry's Lonesome Dove series and Clint Eastward's Unforgiven have quite rightly deconstructed and deflated the 'epic western hero' that "The Untamed" created. It is impossible in this day and age to take "Whistlin' Dan Barry" and the other larger than life gunslingers in this novel seriously. The wild Dan Barry, Master of wolves and horses - not to mention impossibly fast with a gun and strong as a panther - it does make you smile. That does not mean that it is not a great read however. I loved the book, even though I am simultaneausly reading a Larry McMurtry offering - an amusing contrast, but Brand does not suffer too much in the contrast. Max Brand's writing is actually very good, he is a master of action and continuity - superior by far in my view to Zane Grey - that other prolofic writer in this field. Read it - its great. The price was right too - I read the free online version from litrix.com
|
|
|
Most Recent Customer Reviews
|