PIONEER AND FRONTIER STORIES National Library Service for the Blind and Physically Handicapped The Library of Congress Washington 1995 _CONTENTS_ INTRODUCTION NONFICTION Cassettes Braille FICTION Prolific Authors _Louis L'Amour_ Cassettes Braille _Dana Fuller Ross_ Cassettes Braille _More Frontier Stories_ Cassettes Braille ANTHOLOGIES Cassettes Braille OTHER BIBLIOGRAPHIES _Introduction_ _Pioneer and Frontier Stories_ is a bibliography of selected books, fiction and nonfiction, dealing with the lives of the people who blazed trails westward and settled the land. This bibliography does not necessarily include the complete works of the authors represented or everything on this subject available in the collection of the National Library Service for the Blind and Physically Handicapped (NLS). Some books have been excluded because of space limitations, and new works are continually added to the collection. Cooperating libraries can help interested readers find other books on this subject. The explorers who sailed the Atlantic in the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries and returned with news of lands previously unknown to Europeans are well known. The people who crossed those lands by horse and wagon train and devoted their lives to settling the land are not. Their qualities, however, were a major force in defining the image of the American as an individualist. Life was hard on the frontier. The pioneers had to clear the land and build houses before they could begin the business of farming, trapping, trading, and ranching. Moving great distances into unsettled areas, they had to overcome difficulties of climate, weather, and terrain, as well as endure the loneliness of leaving family and friends. Not only comforts were in short supply; so were many necessities such as medicine and professional medical care, resulting in a high infant mortality rate and a short life expectancy. The people who survived this life left dramatic stories. A number of first-hand accounts are included. Many people, not all of them famous, set out to record their experiences. There are autobiographies of Buffalo Bill and General Custer and also of Teddy Blue Abbott, a cowpuncher; Mary Hamilton, a cook; and William Swain, a gold miner. Some left pieces of their stories behind for others to assemble. The personal diary of Emily French, a laundress, is included, and several collections contain excerpts from the daily journals of frontier women. The frontier has provided the setting for a great deal of fiction. Louis L'Amour thought that Buffalo Bill or Wild Bill Hickok would have been perfectly at home on the streets of Homer's Troy or Elizabethan England because these periods had the same qualities the Old West had. Authors as diverse as James Fenimore Cooper, Willa Cather, Larry McMurtry, and Edna Ferber have all set novels on the frontier. The resourcefulness, self reliance, and individualism displayed by the settlers of the American West have become part of the American character. This bibliography is available in large-print, recorded, and braille formats. The large-print edition contains more than 250 titles available on cassette and in braille. The recorded edition lists only cassettes; the braille edition lists only braille. In the large-print and recorded editions, books available on flexible disc are cited at the end of the annotation of the cassette version. The listings in this bibliography are divided into three main sections: nonfiction, fiction (Prolific Authors and More Frontier Stories), and anthologies; and all sections are subdivided by medium. In each section books are listed in alphabetical order by author, then title, with the exception of books that form a series. Each series is labeled and listed in the order in which the books should be read. To order books, contact your cooperating library. *** 11/12/96 (gft)*** Comments to: lcmarvel@loc.gov.