The Rustlersof Pacos Countyby Zane Grey Description:
Zane Grey became especially interested in the West in 1907, after joining a friend on an expedition to trap mountain lions in Arizona. Grey wrote steadily, but it was only in 1910, and after considerable efforts by his wife, that his first western, Heritage of the Desert, became a bestseller. It propelled a career churning out popular novels about manifest destiny and the "conquest of the Wild West." Two years later he produced his best-known book, Riders of the Purple Sage (1912). He formed his own motion picture company, but in a few years sold it to Jesse Lasky who was a partner of the founder of Paramount Pictures. Paramount would make a number of movies based on his writings.
It is also speculated that two of his creations, Lone Star Ranger (a novel later turned into a 1930 film) and King of the Royal Mounted (popular as a series of big little books and comics, later turned into a 1936 film), were later used as an inspiration for two radio series by George Trendle (WXYZ, Detroit) which later made the transition to television - The Lone Ranger and Challenge of the Yukon (Sgt. Preston of the Yukon on TV).
He became one of the first millionaire authors. Over the years his habit was to spend part of the year traveling and living an adventurous life and the rest of the year using his adventures as the basis for the stories in his writings. Some of that time was spent on the Rogue River in Oregon, where he maintained a cabin he had built on an old mining claim he bought. He also had a cabin on the Mogollon Rim in Arizona which burned down during the Dude Fire of 1991.
Zane Grey was the author of over 90 books, some published posthumously and/or based on serials originally published in magazines. Many of them became bestsellers. One of them, Â#Tales of the AnglerÂ#s El Dorado, New ZealandÂ# helped establish the Bay of Islands in New Zealand as a premier game fishing area.
| Version: Deluxe Date: 19.10.2006 License: Shareware
Cost: Free to try, 8.00 $ - to buy.
OS: Win95 Win98 WinMe WinNT4.x Windows 2000 Windows XP
Interface languages: |