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Hardcover Northfield: A Western Story Book

ISBN: 1594145040

ISBN13: 9781594145049

Northfield: A Western Story

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Format: Hardcover

Condition: Good*

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Book Overview

On September 7, 1876, the James-Younger gang attempted to rob the First National Bank of Northfield, Minnesota, with disastrous consequences. In a unique, compelling approach, author Johnny D. Boggs... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

3 ratings

NORTHFIELD by Johnny D. Boggs

The James-Younger gang has been done too many times in modern Western fiction, but Johnny D. Boggs has found a fresh perspective in his novel NORTHFIELD. It chronicles the events of the Northfield, Minnesota raid that claimed the lives of two gang members and saw all three of the Younger brothers jailed. It is the story of the downfall of the gang. It is written in multiple perspectives; the opening and closing scenes are in the voice of Cole Younger, and each chapter between is in the voice of an eyewitness to the events. The narrators include all of the gang members--Frank and Jesse James, Bill Stiles, Clell Miller, Charlie Pitts and Jim, Bob and Cole Younger--as well as a large assortment of witnesses including a prostitute, the former Governor of Mississippi Adelbert Ames, an innkeeper and the boy who first saw the Younger brothers limping out of Minnesota. The style is noticeably different for each narrator; at times it is subtle with stronger and different word choices and other times it is a hard and distinct shift from literate to less literate and even near illiterate. The story sprawls across the pages with a vivid recreation of the events. Johnny D. Boggs does not make a moral judgment on the players. The gang is portrayed with an astonishingly effective blend of villain and common man. They are not necessarily good men, but neither are they bad men. The Youngers, specifically Cole, are humanized and made more real than I have experienced them before in film or literature. The James brothers are viewed less favorably, especially Jesse, but even they are viewed as whole people and not cardboard folk heroes or black-hearted villains. The story is familiar--I know how it ends before I read the first page--but Boggs style and eloquence make it interesting and more than readable. The scenes narrated by Cole Younger have the most power. The style is sharp, literate, and at times, very tough: "Seven minutes...seems like seven lifetimes. "`For God's sake, boys, hurry up! They're shooting us all to pieces!'" It is, however, the separation of viewpoint that gives the narrative its power. It is a piece that rings true; perhaps someone who knows more about the story and subject can find fault, but to my eyes it is close to the correct version. The characters are alive and the story is stirring and vivid. NORTHFIELD is an excellent novel that should get more attention than it has. It is not a shoot-`em-up Western, but rather a contemplative and fine example of how good the modern Western novel can be and often is. -Gravetapping

Northfield

Johnny D. Boggs is one of my favorite authors, and Northfield is one of his best books. Like many other readers, I was familiar with the famous bank robbery. I've read the books and accounts, seen the movies and documentaries that have been produced over the years. Northfield is a big step up from all of them. When an author can capture and hold a reader's attention with a story the reader may have been exposed to a dozen times before - well, it takes a gifted author to do that. Boggs' story is the only one I've seen that puts you smack dab in the middle of the action with an intimate, first-person account of each character. With each new chapter, you become an outlaw, a sheriff, a banker, a farmer, or the innocent person on the street. If you know anything about Jesse and Frank James or the Younger brothers, you'll appreciate the author's impeccable research. But it's tough to imagine how you can identify with a child's tragedy, and yet sympathize with the outlaw who caused it until you read Johnny D. Boggs' Northfield. I highly recommend this one. Frank Allan Rogers, author of Upon a Crazy Horse

Northfield

Johnny D. Boggs is one of my favorite authors, and Northfield is one of his best books. Like many other readers, I was familiar with the famous failed bank robbery. I've read the books and accounts, seen the movies and documentaries over the years. Northfield is a big step up from all of them. When an author can capture and hold a reader's attention with a story the reader may have been exposed to a dozen times before - well, it takes a gifted author to do that. Boggs' story is the only one I've seen that puts you smack dab in the middle of the action with an intimate, first-person account of each character. With each new chapter, you become an outlaw, a sheriff, a banker, a farmer, a child, or the innocent person on the street. If you know anything about Jesse and Frank James or the Younger brothers, you'll appreciate the author's impeccable research. But it's tough to imagine how you can identify with a child's tragedy, and yet sympathize with the outlaw who caused it until you read Johnny D. Boggs' Northfield. I highly recommend this one. Frank Allan Rogers, author Upon A Crazy Horse
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