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Frontier Living

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Format: Hardcover

Condition: Acceptable

$44.99
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Book Overview

With more than 200 illustrations by the author. This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

5 ratings

Wonderful book! Read from front to back or pick any section

Enjoyable and informational from front to back. The illustrations are excellent - as are ALL of his books. It doesn't matter what page you read -- it will be interesting. Guaranteed.

If history is interesting, if pioneers are interesting, this book's for you.

I enjoyed reading this very much. I enjoyed the illustrations as much as the prose. The importance of wood, rivers, and tools jumps off the page for me. It was a bit surprising to me how precious metal was for the pioneer. Making anything, hunting anything was extremely tedious without metal tools. It was pretty tedious even with tools. I'd buy it again even if the binding lost a few pages again (like mine did).

Beautifully Illustrated Tale of Westward Expansion

In "Frontier Living", Edwin Tunis follows out country's century long westward expansion from the Eastern Seaboard, over the Appalachian Mountains, into the Midwest and South and finally across the Missisippi River to the West Coast. Tunis' focus is not on dates and famous leaders but on the lives of ordinary pioneers. What makes this book so special are Edward Tunis' msterful pen and ink illustrations. He was one of the master illustrators of the Twentieth Century. Tunis' drawings of such ingenious things as flutter-wheel sawmills, bullboats and tree stump pulling equipment are absolutely fascinating. For those who love books that focus on material culture, be sure to check out eh works of Eric Sloane, another master illustrator. Highly recommended.

Indispensable for adults as well as young readers

The subtitle says it all: "An Illustrated Guide to Pioneer Life in America, Including Log Cabins, Furniture, Tools, Clothing, and More." From about 1725 to the closing of the frontier, Tunis examines dozens of aspects of American frontier life in this sequel to his "Colonial Living," and even touches on history (the little-known Black Hawk War, the Santa Fe trade, etc.). His clear, detailed pen-and-ink sketches provide a perfect visual accompaniment to written commentary. (Check out the household articles on pp. 24-5, the tub mill on p. 40, the spinning wheels and loom on pp. 46-8, and--my favorite--the elementary prairie well-drilling rig on p. 157, to take just a few examples.) As is often the case with juvenile social histories, he manages to touch on things you don't learn in books written for an adult audience, so the volume should be useful to researchers of every age. My one complaint is the positioning of the page numbers, which are buried in the crack of the binding! This is a book I was delighted to add to my collection, and I recommend it to everyone who has an interest in pre-1900 America.

All aspects of daily life on the American frontier

Frontier Living illuminates all aspects of daily life on the American frontier, from the log cabin to the ranchero. Black and white illustrations by the author provide embellishments to text which describe frontier daily life; from tools and clothing to food. A recommended pick for students of early American frontier days.
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