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At the Twelfth Hour Joseph A. Altsheler

At the Twelfth Hour By Joseph A. Altsheler

At the Twelfth Hour by Joseph A. Altsheler


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Summary

Joseph A. Altsheler was probably the most popular American author of boys' fiction in the first half of the twentieth century. Although his peak of popularity is past, his novels are frequently listed on ebay and find a ready audience. New printings of his most popular novels are still being issued.

At the Twelfth Hour Summary

At the Twelfth Hour: Selected Short Stories of Joseph A. Altsheler by Joseph A. Altsheler

Joseph A. Altsheler was probably the most popular American author of boys' fiction in the first half of the twentieth century. Although his peak of popularity is past, his novels are frequently listed on ebay and find a ready audience. New printings of his most popular novels are still being issued. Despite his popularity, there has never been a collection of his short stories until now. Many of these short stories are of historical and literary interest to a general and academic audience, particularly in Kentucky where many of his stories are set. The contents of At the Twelfth Hour reflect original research about Altsheler's fiction, as well as nine of his best stories.

At the Twelfth Hour Reviews

The nine stories in this collection are considered to be the author's best short fiction....If you enjoy Altsheler's historical novels you will enjoy these short stories. If you've never read Altsheler consider this a sampler that introduces his work. * Dime Novel Round-Up, October 2008 *
Interviewer: What do you read nowadays, when pleasure dictates? Bellow: Well, I did a strange thing. I went to the Brookline Library and looked up a writer named Altsheler. Altsheler was a writer of the boys books that I liked when I was a kid in Chicago. . . .I went through the entire shelf. He wrote about the frontier and the struggles with the Indians. He seems to have known a lot about the Iroquois - he even knew their language it turns out. Marvelous writer. I ordered up a lot of them from libraries all over the area. The latest editions of the books are around 1929 or so . . . In the late 20's I was reading them- Interviewer: What's that like? Bellow: Well, of course they're foolish to read now. But I can see why they were terribly attractive. They were about freedom, strength, ingenuity, patience, learning the lore of the forests, going it alone with only your gun, a bow and arrow, or a knife, a few fishhooks in your pocket, escaping from terrible dangers. . . shades of Fenimore Cooper. I read these books when I'm in the pits, when I can read nothing else. -- Sven Birkerts, A Conversation with Saul Bellow, pp. 1-10, From the 1997 issue of the literary Magazine AGNI, published at Boston University
Interviewer: What do you read nowadays, when pleasure dictates? Bellow: Well, I did a strange thing. I went to the Brookline Library and looked up a writer named Altsheler. Altsheler was a writer of the boys books that I liked when I was a kid in Chicago. . . .I went through the entire shelf. He wrote about the frontier and the struggles with the Indians. He seems to have known a lot about the Iroquois - he even knew their language it turns out. Marvelous writer. I ordered up a lot of them from libraries all over the area. The latest editions of the books are around 1929 or so . . . In the late 20's I was reading them- Interviewer: What's that like? Bellow: Well, of course they're foolish to read now. But I can see why they were terribly attractive. They were about freedom, strength, ingenuity, patience, learning the lore of the forests, going it alone with only your gun, a bow and arrow, or a knife, a few fishhooks in your pocket, escaping from terrible dangers. . . shades of Fenimore Cooper. I read these books when I'm in the pits, when I can read nothing else. -- Sven Birkerts, A Conversation with Saul Bellow, pp. 1-10, From the 1997 issue of the literary Magazine AGNI, published at Boston University

About Joseph A. Altsheler

Robert M. McIlvaine is Professor of English at Slippery Rock University. He has published many articles on American authors including Edgar Allan Poe, Stephen Crane, Ernest Hemingway, Robert E. Howard and others. For the last five years, he has been researching the undeservedly neglected works of Joseph A. Altsheler.

Table of Contents

Part 1 Introduction Part 2 Section I: Civil War Stories Chapter 3 Chapter 1. At the Twelfth Hour: A Tale of a Battle Chapter 4 Chapter 2. After the Battle Chapter 5 Chapter 3. The Break of Day Chapter 6 Chapter 4. Guard No. 10 Chapter 7 Chapter 5. The Retreat of the Ten Part 8 Section II: Adventure Stories Chapter 9 Chapter 6. The Escape Chapter 10 Chapter 7. The Island Chute Chapter 11 Chapter 8. The Lone Huntsman Chapter 12 Chapter 9. In Sheep's Clothing Part 13 Section III: Autobiographical Essay Chapter 14 Chapter 10. What the Home-comers Saw Part 15 About the Author

Additional information

NLS9780761838609
9780761838609
0761838600
At the Twelfth Hour: Selected Short Stories of Joseph A. Altsheler by Joseph A. Altsheler
New
Paperback
University Press of America
2007-10-01
120
N/A
Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.
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