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Kermit Roosevelt, the author of this book, was the son of Theodore Roosevelt, the 26th President of the United States. Here, he recounts his travels across the world alongside his family as they go on leisure hunting trips, taking down antelopes and moose across various countries.
"The low-country of South Carolina furnishes one of the finest fields for a sportsman to enjoy himself in to be found in the United States. The stories, told briefly in simple style and in the ordinary language of the sportsmen of the section, illustrate the modes of pursuing and taking game in South Carolina, with some accounts of past conditions. Various sidelights on the sport in this section are also intersperced throughout the book"--Jacket.
Mated to werewolf Charles Cornick, the son- and enforcer- of the leader of the North American werewolves, Anna Latham now knows how dangerous being a werewolf is, especially when a werewolf who opposes Charles and his father is struck down. Charles's reputation makes him the prime suspect, and the penalty for the crime is execution. Now Anna and Charles must combine their talents to hunt down the real killer - or Charles will take the fall.
Here is a story, in thinly disguised fictional form, of Plains Indians, especially a Cheyenne chief, Whirlwind—his manner of life, his beliefs, and particularly, his love of his son. The villain is a Mandan who is given refuge in the Cheyenne camp and then wreaks havoc with the lives of his hosts. He causes a battle with the Sioux, steals the chief’s favorite wife, and slays the chief’s young son. Whirlwind’s revenge for the death of his beloved son provides a dramatic climax. Happy Hunting Grounds recaptures Cheyenne life on the plains. The battles, celebrations, and lifeways of the Indians—Sioux, Cheyennes, and Mandans—are accurately and graphically portrayed. This volume is illustrated with drawings and paintings by Frederick Weygold, reflecting his own long association with the Plains tribes.
Describes boy's life in the Indian Territory.