John Ermine of the Yellowstone

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John Ermine of the Yellowstone

Frederic Remington
Introduction and notes by Gary Scharnhorst
With illustrations by the author

304 pages
7 halftones; 24 line drawings

Paperback

October 2008

978-0-8032-1878-9

$14.95 Add to Cart

About the Book

No one knew how the blue-eyed, blond-haired white baby came to be abandoned, but the Crow tribe that found him raised him as one of its own. As he grew into adolescence, White Weasel was taken to Crooked-Bear, a white man who had long ago abandoned society for a solitary mountain existence and who acted as counselor to the Crow elders. Under Crooked-Bear’s tutelage, White Weasel was schooled in white ways and rechristened John Ermine. Frederic Remington’s compelling tale relates Ermine’s successful reintroduction into white society, his heroic exploits as a scout in the military, and his growing interest in a white lady, Miss Katherine Searles. In his love for Katherine, Ermine must face the complexities and inequalities of American society. Although American culture may well laud Ermine's military prowess and personal integrity, since he is “wild” he can never truly rise through the ranks of society. It is inevitable that Ermine’s story ends in tragedy.

John Ermine of the Yellowstone is both an epic Western in the classic sense and a complex tale that captures the conflict between European Americans and Native Americans in the Wild West. John Ermine is the tragic character caught between two cultures, unable to assimilate fully into either. Famed artist Frederic Remington uses his pen to convey the irreparable stalemate between two groups of people in an untamed West while making a moving argument for the preservation of a truly wild western front.

Author Bio

Frederic Remington (1861–1909) is best known as a painter, illustrator, and sculptor of iconic images of the American West. Gary Scharnhorst is a distinguished professor of English at the University of New Mexico, the author or editor of more than thirty books, and past president of the Western Literature Association.

Praise

"In John Ermine of the Yellowstone, Remington has presented a great tale of a man caught between two cultures, never able to fully be a member of either."—Larry S. Sterett, Gun Week

"This edition of his 1902 novel, John Ermine of the Yellowstone, demonstrates that it is no dime novel, but an epic Western to stand with Owen Wister's The Virginian. . . . With excellent notes and a sound bibliography of further reading as well as the reproduction of Remington's original illustrations, this reissue is a welcome rescue of this novel from neglect."—Dime Novel Round-Up

Table of Contents

Introduction
I. Virginia City
II. White Weasel
III. The Coming of the Great Spirit
IV. Crooked-Bear
V. The White Medicine
VI. John Ermine
VII. Transformation
VIII. Playing A Man's Part
IX. In Camp
X. A Brush with the Sioux
XI. The Truth of the Eyes
XII. Katherine
XIII. Playing with Fire
XIV. In Love
XV. Bringing in the Wolf
XVI. A Hunt
XVII. A Proposal
XVIII. Man to Man
XIX. Flight
XX. The End of All Things
Notes

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