The Far Frontier

$10.00

ISBN: None Listed
ISBN_13: None Listed
Author: Steele, William O.
Illustrator: Galdone, Paul
Number of pages: 183
Book Condition: Very Good
Dust Jacket Condition: Good
Binding: Gray paper over boards
Publisher: Harcourt, Brace & Co
Publish Place: New York
Copyright: 1959
Publish Year: 1961
Edition: Stated: “Weekly Reader Children’s Book Club edition 1961”

1 in stock

SKU: 15763 Categories: ,

Description

Good dust jacket , illustrated with man and a boy with a musket. 1″ tear at top of spine, some discoloration to spine. “Weekly Reader Children’s Book Club” on the back of dust jacket. The Very Good binding is gray paper over boards decorated with squirrel sitting on a rock in black, black lettering on spine. Corners bumped, toning to pages. Black-an-white illustrations by Paul Galdone. The binding is tight and pages are clean. The book measures 8.2″ tall x 5.7″ wide.

Stated: “Weekly Reader Children’s Book Club edition 1961

About the book (from the dust jacket)

The wilderness and its natural wonders, as well as the settlers and the warring Indians, come vividly alive for readers today in a book that will quickly take its place with Mr. Steele’s outstanding earlier successes, such as Winter Danger, The Lone Hunt, and The Perilous Road, which was a runner-up for the Newbery Medal.

If only his father had bound him out to learn blacksmithing or some other useful trade, young Tobias wouldn’t have minded. But to traipse through the Tennessee wilderness with a naturalist from Philadelphia, whose concern with insects and plants and birds seemed childish and often somewhat “touched” to the frontier folk, was almost more than he could bear. Then when Mr. Twistletree insisted on going deep into hostile Chickamauga Indian territory, Tobe’s reluctance turned into fear of capture and death by slow torture- for which the Chickamaugas were famous.

How Tobe slowly learns to respect and admire Mr. Twistletree, how his own curiosity about books and learning grows, and how, in the end, he comes to understand the importance of study and knowledge, are the heart of this exceptionally fine piece of Americana.