
Bar-20
A Hopalong Cassidy Novel
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Narrado por:
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R.C. Bray
Clarence Mulford's classic Western introduces the legendary Hopalong Cassidy and other colorful cohorts from the Bar-20 ranch. While the Hopalong Cassidy of film and TV (portrayed by the silver-haired, avuncular William Boyd) was clean-cut and polished, Mulford's original Cassidy is rough-and-tumble and foul-mouthed, thriving on brawls and gun-fights.
Bar-20 depicts Cassidy as he was originally conceived, fierce and free-wheeling, and matches the cowboy hero up against Slim Travennes, the violent head of a vigilante gang. Filled with hard characters and gritty gun-play, Bar-20 is a Hopalong Cassidy story from the golden days of the Western that is not to be missed.
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First off the Cassidy character like James Bond, or Matt Helm fit into that category of adaptations where the cinema versions are basically completely different characters than their literary source material. Just know up front that if you've a fan of the movie/television hero, this Hopalong with be a complete stranger. For stories written in the early 1900s, these tales hold up remarkable well, Mulford's writing style is a joy to read; extremely witty, and full of action, and even better to listen to like you're being told a story round a campfire. R.C. Bray is the perfect narrator for these kind of yarns, and I will definitely be looking for other titles with his talents.
Now for the elephant in the room. A lot of comments are made about the racism. Characters in fiction just like in real life aren't perfect. Having racist thought, just like being sexist, or amoral are legit character traits, and I don't expect characters in fiction to be paragons of virtue anymore than I do the people I interact with every day. A fictional character doesn't always have to be likeable, they just need to feel real. If you remember that you're reading historical fiction about the mythological wild west, all of Mulford's characters ring true to the period, not the modern contrivance of stories set in an earlier time where the characters think and act like a 21st century individual when a person from that period wouldn't. If you can accept that, you're in for a good time.
Surprisingly Good !
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Not for the Woke
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not your dad's hoppalong
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Most excellent!!
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Disappointed
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This may be an accurate dramatization of the time, culture, and personnel...
The abundant racism detracts so much from the entertainment value, that I couldn't finish it.
can't do it.
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