The Daughter of a Magnate


Lu par Bob R

(4.4 stars; 15 reviews)

This is an American Western without any bad guys. The main characters are trains, and the elements---snow, terrain, weather and water. Frank Spearman wrote six novels about the building, and early days, of the transcontinental railroad. This was his first. He introduces characters who will reappear in several of his later novels. Those novels all have villains. The daughter of the new owner of the railroad travels by rail with her father to see the new line and the West it covers. They encounter several dozen rough and capable employees, who constructed and run the line. They are thoroughly dedicated men; the railroad is all they know. A supervisor, Ab Glover, falls desperately in love with Gertrude Brock--the daughter of the Magnate. The story is about that love, but even more, it is about the great challenges of weather, terrain and accidents. The numerous terms Spearman uses to describe the railroad and the natural environment had this reader referring often to the dictionary. This reader feels that Spearman's novels are superior to those of the other several writers of American Westerns of the early 1900's. (Summary by Bob Rollins) (6 hr 34 min)

Chapitres

A June Water 24:50 Lu par Bob R
An Error at Headquarters 20:33 Lu par Bob R
Into the Mountains 17:25 Lu par Bob R
As the Dispatcher Saw 7:15 Lu par Bob R
An Emergency Call 7:08 Lu par Bob R
The Cat and the Rat 12:31 Lu par Bob R
Time Being Money 15:17 Lu par Bob R
Splitting the Paw 14:24 Lu par Bob R
A Truce 12:57 Lu par Bob R
And a Shock 18:24 Lu par Bob R
In the Lalla Rookh 14:52 Lu par Bob R
A Slip on a Special 17:20 Lu par Bob R
Back to the Mountains 20:02 Lu par Bob R
Glen Tarn 20:36 Lu par Bob R
November 14:41 Lu par Bob R
Night 17:03 Lu par Bob R
Storm 22:18 Lu par Bob R
Daybreak 17:17 Lu par Bob R
Suspense 25:10 Lu par Bob R
Deepening Waters 20:49 Lu par Bob R
Pilot 9:32 Lu par Bob R
The South Arete 24:09 Lu par Bob R
Business 20:14 Lu par Bob R

Critiques


(5 stars)

Enjoyed this book very much. The reader was very good.