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Old Jules (Third Edition)

Old Jules (Third Edition)

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Author: Mari Sandoz
Creator: Linda M. Hasselstrom
Publisher: Bison Books
Category: Book

List Price: $16.95
Buy New: $9.80
You Save: $7.15 (42%)



New (8) Used (9) Collectible (1) from $7.29

Avg. Customer Rating: 4.0 out of 5 stars 17 reviews
Sales Rank: 213054

Media: Paperback
Edition: 2nd
Number Of Items: 1
Pages: 425
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.5
Dimensions (in): 8 x 5.1 x 0.8

ISBN: 0803293240
Dewey Decimal Number: 978.20310922
EAN: 9780803293243
ASIN: 0803293240

Publication Date: April 1, 2005
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
Shipping: Expedited shipping available
Shipping: International shipping available

Also Available In:

  • Hardcover - Old Jules: 50th Anniversary Edition
  • Paperback - Old Jules: 50th Anniversary Edition (Bison Book)
  • Unknown Binding - Old Jules (Armed Services edition)
  • Hardcover - Old Jules: Portrait of a Pioneer
  • Unknown Binding - Old Jules
  • Hardcover - Old Jules

Similar Items:

  • Crazy Horse (second edition): The Strange Man of the Oglalas (50th Anniversary Edition)
  • Cheyenne Autumn (Second Edition)
  • These Were the Sioux (Bison Book)
  • Love Song to the Plains
  • The Cattlemen: From the Rio Grande across the Far Marias

Editorial Reviews:

Product Description
First published in 1935, Old Jules is unquestionably Mari Sandoz’s masterpiece. This portrait of her pioneer father grew out of “the silent hours of listening behind the stove or the wood box, when it was assumed, of course, that I was asleep in bed. So it was that I heard the accounts of the hunts,” Sandoz recalls. "Of the fights with the cattlemen and the sheepmen, of the tragic scarcity of women, when a man had to ‘marry anything that got off the train,’ of the droughts, the storms, the wind and isolation. But the most impressive stories were those told me by Old Jules himself.” This Bison Books edition includes a new introduction by Linda M. Hasselstrom.



Customer Reviews:   Read 12 more reviews...

4 out of 5 stars Review of "Old Jules"   February 18, 2008
 1 out of 1 found this review helpful

I found this book to be very interesting. I have ready only one other book by Mari Sandoz - but recognized many of the titles listed inside. It's a tough thing to write about your father - and capture the uniqueness. She was able to describe him and keep herself as a "bystander" when much of his disciplinary methods were directed at herself and her siblings. She was also able to give the reader a preview of what the Nebraska panhandle was like as it opened up to settlement and beyond. I have lived in the Black Hills about 30 years ago - and I could picture her descriptions of the land very well. This is a book that supplements historical accounts - a "looking glass" view into the life of one man and how he viewed his corner of that world. I especially liked the end where she listed all the people who came to his sickbed. He was a force - and the reader should decide a "force for what?"


5 out of 5 stars Masterpiece of Western Americana   December 17, 2007
 1 out of 1 found this review helpful

This is a book you can't put down once the first sentence leaps off the page at you. Vividly told, with accompanying pictures of the land and the people, it is one that was surely deserving of the literary honors it received upon it's first publishing. It is a story of a highly intelligent, manipulative, yet visionary man driven by many things; unrequited love which forever tormented him, an abusive inner nature that only needed the urging found on the untamed primitive Nebraska plains to emerge and effect the "control of others"; the obsession to "settle the country" and bring farms and families into a community that could survive all hardships toward a common goal. He was married six times; drove the weakest one of them into the insane asylum; and nearly drove his last and most tenacious wife to suicide during an incident where he struck her with a strand of barbed wire when she couldn't "hold a calf down firmly enough to keep it from kicking" while being worked.

It is also a history of the Valentine, Nebraska area, backed by historical facts "gleaned from the newspapers" of the times for a series of incredible events; including vigilante justice, a brush with a pleasant horse thief ("Gentleman Jim") in the hills where he was saved only by his ignorance of the circumstances; inhumane treatment of the plains indians (but amazingly, not by Jules) and persecution of his own kind by still others.

I found it amazing that Ms. Sandoz could write so objectively about her father in the effort to tell his story, but she considered it not only an honor, but a duty since he asked it of her on his deathbed; and I am sure the only reason that could be was perhaps at least partially due to the fact that Old Jules never established a bond with any of his children. They were a "product" to him; a means to accomplish a goal; a workforce. Therefore, it may have been easier for her to be brutally honest when writing of him.

Perhaps it was meant to be that way. Because the story is in a class apart and therefore, I highly recommend it to anyone seeking Western American History the "way it was" (although assuredly not all families were headed up by an Old Jules) rather than the "way it is sometimes told" in movies and other types of literature. I have a "First Edition" of this book - a priceless item, it holds a very special place in my home library since my own parents were early settlers of Wyoming.



5 out of 5 stars Nebraska History   July 21, 2007
 0 out of 1 found this review helpful

This books tells of a pioneer emmigrant that survives the panhandle Nebraska, as a farmer(more his 4th wife than him), when most people thought it couldn't be done. What a great story of a man, and what he puts his family through. This is no Little House on The Prairie.


1 out of 5 stars Old Jules sucks old balls   January 5, 2007
 2 out of 13 found this review helpful

It's a long, boring book about some old dirt farmer out in bumf&*k, Nebraska beating his wife and having kids he doesn't love. The end.


2 out of 5 stars I've read better books   November 10, 2006
 2 out of 5 found this review helpful

Old Jules is not a bad book, it's just too long for one thing. The characters and their lifestyle are quite unique but their lackluster day to day existence needn't have taken up so many pages. If you want gripping, white-knuckle excitement, look elsewhere. The book is interesting from a historical point of view maybe but it just wasn't my kind of read. (Ho-hum........)


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