



The Sackett Companion
The Facts Behind the Fiction
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4.4 • 10 Ratings
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- $7.99
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- $7.99
Publisher Description
Little did Louis L'Amour realize back in 1960 when he published The Daybreakers, a novel about two brothers who came west after the Civil War, that he had begun creating what would become perhaps North America's most widely followed literary family: the Sacketts. The stories of ten generations of Sackett men and women as they forged westward from tyranny-wracked seventeenth-century England across the American continent have captivated readers for three decades through seventeen novels with nearly forty millions copies in print. The traditions and adventures of this family of rugged individualists who stand indomitably united when any Sackett is in trouble have inspired country songs, a popular television miniseries starring Tom Selleck (as Orrin Sackett) and Sam Elliot (as Tell Sackett), thousands of reader queries—and now, a rare full-length work of non-fiction by the worlds' all-time best-selling frontier novelist.
In a 60 Minutes profile in which he hailed Louis L'Amour as "our professor emeritus of how the West was won," correspondent Morley Safer observed that "his plots may be fiction but the details therein are fact." The Sackett Companion is the author's long-savored opportunity to present the research and probe the factors behind his Sackett fiction—novel by novel—and to elaborate on their real and fictional characters, their geography and locales, and their historical eras in encyclopedia-like detail.
In this book, subtitled A Personal Guide To The Sackett Novels, L'Amour takes us on a guided tour of his imagination to introduce us to the never-before-told sources and inspirations for these stories and the people and places that populate them. He retraces some of his travels in which he has walked the land the Sacketts walk, reliving such personal memories as the street fight he had on a hot dusty morning in New Mexico that ultimately led to the birth of the Sacketts.
Customer Reviews
Mixed results
If you're looking for something that provides context for the stories in the series, and/or you want to get a glance into some of the thought processes behind the stories, this is the book for you.
What it isn't is an encyclopedic, plot point by plot point, Cliff Notes style approach. It's a narrative that won't give you, the reader or critic, a shortcut to actually reading the stories. If you want that, skip this and go to the Wikipedia entry for this series.
Not to say that a little more structured scholarly approach wouldn't be unwelcome. But that isn't what this is.
The only real disappointment, given the cost of the ebook edition, are the low resolution images of the maps and drawings that preface each chapter, the almost unreadable low resolution Sackett family tree image, and the lack of other supporting images and documents. Some of which could be fixed by the publisher.