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B. M. Bower (1871–1940)

Author of Chip of the Flying U

96+ Works 1,004 Members 15 Reviews

About the Author

Series

Works by B. M. Bower

Chip of the Flying U (1906) 68 copies, 3 reviews
Cabin Fever (1918) 51 copies
Flying U Ranch (1914) 45 copies, 1 review
Lonesome Land (1912) 45 copies, 2 reviews
The Happy Family (1996) 37 copies
The Lure of the Dim Trails (1907) 35 copies, 1 review
The Heritage of the Sioux (2002) 29 copies
The Flying U's Last Stand (1915) 27 copies
The Long Shadow (2007) 27 copies
The Range Dwellers (1906) 26 copies
Starr, of the Desert (1917) 25 copies
The Quirt (1921) 25 copies
The Phantom Herd (1916) 24 copies
The Lonesome Trail (2012) 24 copies
The Flying U Strikes (1933) 23 copies
The Ranch at the Wolverine (2010) 23 copies, 1 review
Jean of the Lazy A (1915) 23 copies
Cow-Country (1921) 22 copies
Her Prairie Knight (1904) 21 copies
The Lookout Man (2012) 21 copies, 1 review
The Gringos (2004) 20 copies
The Thunder Bird (2005) 20 copies, 1 review
Skyrider (1918) 20 copies
Good Indian (1912) 20 copies
The Trail of the White Mule (2010) 14 copies
Rim o' the World (1919) 14 copies, 1 review
The uphill climb (2012) 14 copies, 1 review
Casey Ryan (1921) 13 copies
Pirates of the Range (1998) 12 copies
Rodeo (2002) 11 copies
Black Thunder (1926) 11 copies
The Parowan Bonanza (2018) 10 copies, 1 review
White Wolves (1946) 9 copies
Trouble Rides the Wind (2005) 9 copies
Desert Brew (1925) 9 copies, 1 review
Rowdy of the Cross L (2012) 8 copies
Open land (2000) 8 copies
The Dry Ridge Gang (1944) 7 copies
Laughing Water (1932) 7 copies
Fool's Goal (2018) 7 copies
The Bellehelen mine (1924) 6 copies
The voice at Johnnywater (1923) 6 copies
Meadowlark Basin (2022) 6 copies
Border Vengeance (1971) 5 copies
Van Patten, (1926) 5 copies
Shadow mountain (2003) 5 copies
The Eagle’s Wings (1924) 4 copies
The north wind do blow (1937) 4 copies
Rocking arrow (1932) 4 copies
The Wind Blows West (1938) 4 copies
The Whoop-Up Trail (1933) 4 copies
The Spirit of the Range (2005) 4 copies
Points West (2018) 3 copies
The Swallowfork bulls (1929) 3 copies
Tiger Eye (2018) 3 copies
Adam Chasers (1927) 3 copies
The Family Failing (2011) 3 copies
Trigger Vengeance (1953) 2 copies
Trails Meet (2018) 2 copies, 1 review
Outlaw moon, (1971) 2 copies
A Starry Night (1939) 2 copies
Singing Hill (1939) 2 copies
Haywire 1 copy
The Eagle's Wing (2022) 1 copy
Outlaw Moon 1 copy
Sweet grass, (1940) 1 copy
Hay-Wire 1 copy
Tamed 1 copy
Ranch at the Wolverine (1914) 1 copy
The Long Loop (1931) 1 copy

Associated Works

The Arbor House Treasury of Great Western Stories (1982) — Contributor — 103 copies, 1 review
Great Tales of the West (1982) — Contributor — 30 copies, 1 review
She Won the West (1985) — Contributor — 11 copies
Adventure - October 15, 1929 - Vol. LXXII No. 3 (1929) — Contributor — 2 copies

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Members

Reviews

I was shocked by how good this was. A woman writer in 1906 putting together a very compelling western with fully formed main characters, great atmosphere, humor and a little romance on the side was not what I expected. Add to that the fact that the author used the proceeds from this book to leave her abusive first husband and I love it even more!
 
Flagged
AliceAnna | 2 other reviews | Nov 25, 2022 |
This is pretty silly. Clearly not one of Bower's best. Jack Corey, a spoiled rich boy is out with friends, drinking and partying. On the way home, they decide to goof around a bit and "hold up" some cars on the road. One such hold up involves getting a young man shot. Jack and his friends flee. When Jack gets home, he realizes he might be in deep doo doo, so he decides to "disappear".

He disappears to northern California and ends up manning a fire tower in the forest. Essentially, he finds himself living in a glass booth on the top of a mountain, overlooking miles of forest. His job is to watch for forest fires and call in their location when he sees one. It's a lonely job, but at least he's safe from prying eyes. Hardly anyone goes near his location except for an occasional hiker. He changes his name slightly, and his hair style so he can pretend he can't be found.

But, just down the mountain, a party of four people show up. Allegedly, they're prospecting. They have to dig and pretend to prospect for a couple of years. Then, they gain claim to the land, at which point they can cut down the timber and actually make some money. One of the crew is the delectable Marion Rose.

Naturally, Jack eventually becomes enamored with Marion Rose, and when he's not paying attention, he runs his fingers through his hair so that he again looks like Jack Corey, the wanted man, not John Carew, the lookout man. Marion doesn't seem to mind all that much, especially after Jack explains the circumstances.

When, lots of excitement ensues, including a whopper of a wild fire that threatens Marion Rose. The ending isn't so great. It's like Ms. Bower got bored and just tied things up in a few pages. So, most of the book was ok and engaging, but the end didn't work well. I've read a number of Bower books now, and liked them all. This one was ok, but not up to all the other Bower books I've read.
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lgpiper | Jun 12, 2022 |
Tough at the beginning, but got more appealing once I figured out where it was going. Basically, we have a cowboy with a serious drinking problem and it's an "uphill climb" to overcome it.
 
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lgpiper | Jun 12, 2022 |
Yet another second-rate contemporary book drove me back to cowboy books from a century ago. What's going on with modern writers (besides the fact that proper grammar, as it was taught up into the 1960s, if not beyond, seems no longer to matter to writers, who were at one time, presumably, English majors)?

This was fun, albeit a bit different. A young woman, Valaria Peyson, known as Val, comes out to Hope, Montana to marry her sweetheart of three years, Manley Fleetwood (Man). He's changed, although she wouldn't have know it from his letters. It turns out he's become a drunk and doesn't work all that hard on his ranch. When Val arrives at the train station, he's not around. She is met by a somewhat diffident "cowboy", Kent Burnett, who takes her to the local hotel and drops her immediately. Burnett then heads to the local saloon. She thinks he's gone off drinking, but in reality, he's gone to sober up the prospective husband.

Well, things go on. Eventually, Man gets his comeuppance and Burnett is revealed to be a good person and worthy of someone of the likes of Val. Something like that.
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Flagged
lgpiper | 1 other review | Jun 12, 2022 |

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Works
96
Also by
7
Members
1,004
Popularity
#25,690
Rating
½ 3.4
Reviews
15
ISBNs
693
Languages
6

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