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Jay Gurian Western American Literature, Volume 3, Number 4, Winter 1969, pp. 285-296 (Article) Published by University of Nebraska Press DOI: https://doi.org/10.1353/wal.1969.0055 For additional information about this article https://muse.jhu.edu/article/528764/summary Access provided at 22 Feb 2020 04:10 GMT from JHU Libraries J A Y G U R I A N University of H aw aii Style in the L iterary Desert: Little Big Man “D o g g o n e i t ”, said M onte, rallying, g rinn in g, “Y ou’re p rettier’n ever, Miss H azel, w h en you g et riled that way.” “R iled?” snorted Miss H azel, sniffing again. "W ell, I just never.” T rite? Yes. T h e same W estern sounds— “rile d ,” “doggone,” “W ell, I never.” O u t of a th ird rate p u lp o r paperback selection? A B-grade Western? O u t of M o n te Walsh, a first rate, m ajor W estern novel by Jack Schaefer, one of the W est’s most serious living authors. Page 308. Is this how cowboys an d town girls talked to each o ther in 1887? Probably. I t m ig ht
Western American Literature – The Western Literature Association
Published: Oct 4, 2017
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