Publication year 1950
Genre Autobiography / Memoir, Nonfiction
Themes Family, Coming of Age, Perseverance, Masculinity, Environment
Tags Western
Westerns
Our Westerns Collection highlights stories about the landscapes and people that shaped the American West. We have carefully curated titles that represent a diverse range of voices, including those of Indigenous people affected by Westward Expansion. These selections focus on themes such as settlement and displacement, wilderness and the natural world, and freedom and opportunity.
Father and I Were Ranchers
Follow the River
Fools Crow
Half Broke Horses
How Much Of These Hills Is Gold
In the Distance
Last Bus To Wisdom
Legends of the Fall
Little House in the Big Woods
Little House on the Prairie
Lonesome Dove
Lone Women
Lost and Lassoed
Mean Spirit
Mimesis
Moccasin Trail
Montana 1948
News of the World
No Country for Old Men
Old Yeller
Publication year 1950
Genre Autobiography / Memoir, Nonfiction
Themes Family, Coming of Age, Perseverance, Masculinity, Environment
Tags Western
Publication year 1981
Genre Novel, Fiction
Themes Perseverance, Love, Colonialism
Tags Historical Fiction, Survival Fiction, Action & Adventure, Western, American Literature, US History, World History
Publication year 1986
Genre Novel, Fiction
Tags Western, Education, Education, World History, Historical Fiction, Classic Fiction
James Welch’s Fools Crow (1987) is an historical novel that retells the Anglo conquering of the American West and, specifically, the events leading up to the Marias Massacre in Montana, in 1870, from the perspective of the Blackfeet (Pikuni) people. The novel chronicles the experiences of the Pikuni as they struggle to maintain their traditions in the face of smallpox, violent persecution, and shrinking numbers of buffalo as more white Americans–the Napikwans–move onto their lands... Read Fools Crow Summary
Publication year 2008
Genre Novel, Fiction
Themes Family
Tags Historical Fiction, Life-Inspired Fiction, Western, World History, Biography
Jeannette Walls describes her book Half Broke Horses as a “True-Life Novel,” as it describes the life of her real-life grandmother Lily Casey Smith. The book is told in the first person from the perspective of Lily as she grows up in the harsh desert southwest. While the book is classified as a novel (since Walls was unable to back-up all of the facts about Smith’s life), it reads more like a memoir. Walls begins... Read Half Broke Horses Summary
Publication year 2020
Genre Novel, Fiction
Themes Appearance & Reality, Family, Race
Tags Chinese Literature, Asian Literature, Historical Fiction, Western, Race & Racism, Immigration & Refugeeism, World History, LGBTQ+
Publication year 2017
Genre Novel, Fiction
Themes Grief, Guilt, Loneliness, Love, Siblings
Tags Historical Fiction, Western, Action & Adventure, Immigration & Refugeeism, Modern Classic Fiction, World History
Publication year 2015
Genre Novel, Fiction
Themes Coming of Age, Family, Politics & Government, Place, Self Discovery, Community, Literature
Tags Historical Fiction, Coming of Age, Western, World History
Publication year 1979
Genre Short Story Collection, Fiction
Themes War, Masculinity
Tags Historical Fiction, Western, Relationships, World War II, American Literature, World History, Romance, Classic Fiction
Legends of the Fall is a collection of three novellas by Jim Harrison, including “Revenge,” “The Man Who Gave Up His Name,” and the titular novella, “Legends of the Fall.” First published in 1979 by Collins, Legends of the Fall remains one of Harrison’s most highly regarded works. Harrison wrote across a range of genres such as fiction, poetry, essay, and film and was the recipient of several awards including a Guggenheim Fellowship. His work... Read Legends of the Fall Summary
Publication year 1932
Genre Novel, Fiction
Themes Family
Tags Historical Fiction, Children`s Literature, Western, World History, Classic Fiction
Little House in the Big Woods was published in 1932 by American author Laura Ingalls Wilder. The first in a nine-book series, the autobiographical narrative relates the story of a family of homesteading pioneers living and laboring in Wisconsin. The story is illustrated by Garth Williams, whose drawings of the Ingalls family are often considered iconic and an integral part of the reading experience.This is a classic children’s tale set during an era of western... Read Little House in the Big Woods Summary
Publication year 1932
Genre Novel, Fiction
Themes Family
Tags Children`s Literature, Historical Fiction, Classic Fiction, Western, World History
The Ingalls family—parents Charles and Caroline, known as “Pa” and “Ma” in the book, and daughters Mary (age seven), Laura (age six) and Carrie (a baby)—live in Wisconsin in the late 1800s near their extended families. Pa hears that Native American territory on the prairies of Kansas will soon open up to settlement by whites and decides to move there to claim a good plot of land before the selection gets too competitive. The family... Read Little House on the Prairie Summary
Publication year 1985
Genre Novel, Fiction
Themes Friendship, Place, Masculinity, Gender Identity
Tags Western, Historical Fiction, American Literature, World History, Action & Adventure, Classic Fiction
Lonesome Dove is a 1985 novel by American author Larry McMurtry. Chronologically, it is the third book in the Lonesome Dove series, although it was published before its two prequels, Dead Man’s Walk (1995) and Comanche Moon (1997). One of the most celebrated novels in the Western genre, Lonesome Dove tells the story of former Texas Rangers Augustus (Gus) McRae and Woodrow Call (Call) as they take a herd of cattle on an ill-fated drive... Read Lonesome Dove Summary
Publication year 2023
Genre Novel, Fiction
Themes Guilt, Femininity, Gender Identity, Race, Environment, Family, Community
Tags Horror & Suspense, Mystery & Crime Fiction, World History, Historical Fiction, Western, Fantasy
Publication year 2024
Genre Novel, Fiction
Themes Love, Conflict, Perseverance, Plants, Place, Friendship, Self Discovery, Community
Tags Romance, Western
Publication year 1990
Genre Novel, Fiction
Themes Indigenous Identity, Race, The Past, Environment, Power & Greed
Tags Historical Fiction, Western, Magical Realism, American Literature, Education, Education, Mystery & Crime Fiction, World History
Mean Spirit (1990) is the first novel by Chickasaw author Linda Hogan. Nominated for the Pulitzer Prize for Fiction in 1991, it was well-reviewed and established Hogan as an important Indigenous author. The novel tells the story of what came to be known as the Osage murders, a string of killings in Oklahoma’s Osage country after oil was discovered on Osage land. The murders were ultimately discovered to have been the result of not only... Read Mean Spirit Summary
Publication year 1946
Genre Book, Nonfiction
Themes Literature, Place, Art, Language
Tags Philosophy, European History, Western, German Literature, Literary Criticism, World History, Philosophy
Publication year 1952
Genre Novel, Fiction
Themes Indigenous Identity, Family, Self Discovery
Tags Children`s Literature, Western, Action & Adventure, Historical Fiction
Publication year 1993
Genre Novella, Fiction
Themes Coming of Age, Loyalty & Betrayal
Tags Western, Coming of Age, Education, Education, World History, Historical Fiction, Classic Fiction
Montana 1948 is set in a small town on the very northeastern edge of the state of Montana. The events described are experienced through the eyes of David Hayden, a twelve-year-old boy. In a prologue, he describes several images he remembers vividly from forty years ago. Years later, after both of his parents are dead, David decides to tell the whole story of the tragedy he witnessed as a boy. At the time of David’s narrative, he lives... Read Montana 1948 Summary
Publication year 2016
Genre Novel, Fiction
Themes Memory
Tags Western, Historical Fiction, World History, Action & Adventure
Paulette Jiles’s novel, News of the World, tells the tale of 72-year-old Captain Jefferson Kyle Kidd and 10-year-old Johanna Leonberger's journey from Wichita, Texas to Castroville, Texas in 1870, and how that journey would forever and drastically change the course of each of their lives.The story begins in Wichita, Texas, in the early spring of 1870, with Captain Kidd hanging posters advertising his reading of the news. He travels the state reading newspapers to people... Read News of the World Summary
Publication year 2005
Genre Novel, Fiction
Themes Good & Evil
Tags Mystery & Crime Fiction, Western, Horror & Suspense, American Literature, Modern Classic Fiction
In No Country for Old Men, by Cormac McCarthy, Sheriff Ed Tom Bell investigates a sudden spate of murders in his typically quiet corner of the Texas borderlands. Llewelyn Moss, a Vietnam vet and hunter, gets caught up in the aftermath of a drug-deal gone wrong, and soon both Sheriff Bell and a mysterious hit-man race to be the first to track Moss down: one with the intention of saving his life and the other... Read No Country for Old Men Summary
Publication year 1942
Genre Novel, Fiction
Themes Coming of Age
Tags Western, Children`s Literature, Historical Fiction, Education, Education, Animals, Realistic Fiction, Classic Fiction
Published in 1956, Old Yeller is a classic historical fiction novel about the bond between a boy and his dog. With his Papa away on a cattle drive, 14-year-old Travis Coates gets help from a brave stray dog. Together, they defend the homestead and protect Travis’s mother and little brother. When a plague of hydrophobia threatens the family, Travis makes the difficult decision to kill Old Yeller. The novel poignantly explores themes of family and... Read Old Yeller Summary