True to Type
- Share via
My long hope that tribute be paid to that classic, Jack Schafer’s “Shane,” (Book Review, June 23) is over. I am in my 91st year, was born in a log cabin, and raised in a small frontier town in the Northwest. I saw cowboys whooping it up on the streets, or near saloons in those days; recall one unforgettable scene of a horse tied to a fence, his owner asleep in the meadow.
Yes, there were true types in “Shane”--the good husband, the small, hero-worshiping boy, the wife, the hint of romance, as it would be, for these hard-riding, hard-drinking men were often handsome, carefree types, yet sentimental under it all.
The chinked log cabin, mountain meadow--perfection, perfection, and very moving. I am grateful to you for bringing this vanished scene back to me. L.W. STONE Carpinteria
More to Read
Sign up for our Book Club newsletter
Get the latest news, events and more from the Los Angeles Times Book Club, and help us get L.A. reading and talking.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Los Angeles Times.