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Flint
Hills Cowboys
Tales of the Tallgrass Prairie
Jim Hoy
April 2006
336 pages, 50 photographs, 6 x 9
Cloth ISBN 0-7006-1456-7, $29.95
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The Flint Hills are America's
last tallgrass prairie, a green enclave set in the midst of the
farmland of eastern Kansas. Known as the home of the Big Beef
Steer, these rugged hills have produced exemplary cowboys-both
the ranch and rodeo varieties-whose hard work has given them
plenty of material for equally good stories.
Jim Hoy grew up in the
Flint Hills on a ranch at Cassoday that's been in his family
for five generations and boasts roots "as deep as those
of bluestem grass in black-soil bottomland." He now draws
on this area's rich cowboy lore-as well as on his own experience
working cattle, breaking horses, and rodeoing-to write a folk
history of the Flint Hills spanning a century and a half.
In Flint Hills Cowboys,
Hoy blends history, folklore, and memoir to conjure for readers
the tallgrass prairies of his boyhood in a book that richly recalls
the ranching life and the people who lived it. Here are cowboys
and outlaws, rodeo stars and runaway horses, ordinary folks and
the stuff of legends. Hoy introduces readers to the likes of
Lou Hart, a top hand with the Crocker Brothers from 1906 to1910,
whose poetic paean to ranch life circulated orally for fifty
years before seeing print. And he tracks down the legend of Bud
Gillette, considered by his neighbors the world's fastest man
until he fell in with an unscrupulous promoter. He even unravels
the mystery of a lone grave supposed to be that of the first
cowboy in the Flint Hills.
Hoy also explains why a
good horse makes up for having to work with exasperating cattle-and
why not all horses are created (or trained) equal. And he traces
Flint Hills cattle culture from the days of the trail drive through
the railroad years to today's trucking era, with most railroad
stockyards torn down and only one section house left standing.
Writes Hoy, "I feed
on the stories of the Hills and the characters who tell them
as the cattle feed on the grasses." His love of the land
shines throughout a book so real that readers will swear they
hear the click
of horseshoes on flint rock with every turn of the page.
The Flint Hills are my
home country, the land that nurtured my life and nourished my
soul. My roots here are as deep as those of bluestem grass in
black-soil bottomland. . . . I was reared among cattle and horses,
ranchers and cowboys, pasture work and rodeos, and that is the
Hills that I know and these are the stories I've heard.--Jim
Hoy, from the Introduction
"There are only a
few cowboy-scholars of the Great Plains who manage to wear the
Stetson and the mortar board with equal grace. E.E. Dale comes
to mind, and now, thanks to Flint Hills Cowboys, so does Jim
Hoy. Writing from roots. Grounded. Real."--Thomas D. Isern,
coauthor of Plains Folk and Kansas Land
JIM HOY is the author of
numerous other books about cowboy life, including The Cattle
Guard: Its History and Lore and, most recently, Vaqueros, Cowboys,
and Buckaroos, coauthored with Lawrence Clayton and Jerald Underwood.
He is professor of English and director of the Center for Great
Plains Studies at Emporia State University.
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