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Hopalong Cassidy: A Hopalong Cassidy Novel
Unavailable
Hopalong Cassidy: A Hopalong Cassidy Novel
Unavailable
Hopalong Cassidy: A Hopalong Cassidy Novel
Audiobook8 hours

Hopalong Cassidy: A Hopalong Cassidy Novel

Written by Clarence E. Mulford

Narrated by R.C. Bray

Rating: 5 out of 5 stars

5/5

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Currently unavailable

Currently unavailable

About this audiobook

Hopalong Cassidy, the iconic western cowboy hero conceived by Clarence Mulford, was immortalized in a highly popular film series starring William Boyd from 1935-1948. A tough-talking and violent character in print, Hopalong Cassidy was remade into a clean-cut screen hero who roamed the West with his sidekicks and fought villains who took advantage of the weak. Here Cassidy is drawn as Mulford originally conceived; rough-and-tumble, foul-mouthed, and thriving on brawls and gunplay. Set in the raw, unforgiving American frontier, this action-packed classic pits Hopalong Cassidy and the rest of the Bar-20 crew against a violent gang of vigilantes.
LanguageEnglish
Release dateJan 29, 2013
ISBN9781624062148
Unavailable
Hopalong Cassidy: A Hopalong Cassidy Novel
Author

Clarence E. Mulford

Clarence Edward Mulford (1883-1956) was the creator of Hopalong Cassidy, a cowboy character he originated in 1904. He wrote it in Fryeburg, Maine, United States, and the many stories and 28 novels were followed by radio, feature film, television, and comic book versions. Clarence was born in Streator, Illinois. He died of complications from surgery in Portland, Maine. He set aside much of his money from his book for local charities.

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Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
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  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    The first hopalong movie pretty much follows the book. I am glad that Mumford redeemed himself about “greasers” at the end. I am not a fan of critical race theory which wants to sweep away the past so we have no measure of progress and thus leave us wide open to Marxist agitators who seek to divide us so that they might weaken us. We should look squarely at reality and see how people in the past thought and spoke so we can rid our own hearts of such thoughts and appreciate how literature progressed. We can then appreciate what Edna Ferber did in Giant portraying the noble vaquero and pointing out that white Texans learned from them how to herd cattle and even adopted the vaquero’s nomenclature.