The movie Jeremiah Johnson introduced millions to the legendary mountain man, John Johnson. The real Johnson was a far cry from the Redford version. Standing 6’2′ in his stocking feet and weighing nearly 250 pounds, he was a mountain man among mountain men, one of the toughest customers on the western frontier. As the story goes, one morning in 1847 Johnson returned to his Rocky Mountain trapper’s cabin to find the remains of his murdered Indian wife and her unborn child. He vowed vengeance against an entire Indian tribe. Crow Killer tells of that one-man, decades-long war to avenge his beloved. Whether seen as a realistic glimpse of a long ago, fierce frontier world, or as a mythic retelling of the many tales spun around and by Johnson, Crow Killer is unforgettable. This new edition, redesigned for the first time, features an introduction by western frontier expert Nathan E. Bender and a glossary of Indian tribes.
Tabella dei contenuti
Introduction by Nathan E. Bender
Foreword by Richard M. Dorson
Preface
Acknowledgments
Part One: The Young Trapper
1. The Making of a Legend
2. The Hair Merchants
3. An Apprenticeship
4. A Madness
5. Oath of Vengeance
Part Two: Liver-Eating Johnson
6. A Man’s Reputation
7. Twined Scalps
8. Crow Against Flathead
9. Winter Holiday, Spring Council
10. . . . A Missing Chapter
Part Three: A Man Among Men
11. The Eighteenth Warrior
12. Captive of the Blackfeet
13. Mountain-Man Rendezvous
14. Boots and Biscuits
15. Portuguese Phillips
16. A Sioux Liver
17. Monument for a Foe’s Friend
18. Target for Gray Bear
Part Four: Brother of the Crows
19. White Chief of the Shoshoni
20. Biscuits for Blackfeet
21. A Last Departure
22. Mariano and the Ute Chief
23. The Piegan Princess
24. Eight Scalps for the Crows
Part Five: The Old Trapper
25. Burial for Bear Claw
26. Sheriff Johnson
27. Last Trail
28. Lodge by the Sea
Glossary of Native Peoples in Crow Killer
Circa l’autore
Raymond W. Thorp is author of Bowie Knife and Spirit Gun of the West: The Story of Doc W. F. Carver, among other titles.
Nathan E. Bender is an independent scholar and consultant in Laramie, Wyoming, who has written extensively on the Old West.