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Wyatt Earp: A Vigilante Life Kindle Edition
In popular culture, Wyatt Earp is the hero of the Gunfight at the O.K. Corral in Tombstone, Arizona, and a beacon of rough cowboy justice in the tumultuous American West. The subject of dozens of films, he has been invoked in battles against everything from organized crime in the 1930s to al-Qaeda after 9/11. Yet as the historian Andrew C. Isenberg reveals here, the Hollywood Earp is largely a fiction—one created by none other than Earp himself.
The lawman played on-screen by Henry Fonda and Burt Lancaster is stubbornly duty-bound; in actuality, Earp led a life of impulsive lawbreaking and shifting identities. When he wasn’t wearing a badge, he was variously a thief, a brothel bouncer, a gambler, and a confidence man.
By 1900, Earp’s involvement as a referee in a fixed heavyweight prizefight brought him notoriety as a scoundrel. Determine to rebuild his reputation, he spent his last decades in Los Angeles, spinning yarns about himself for credulous silent film actors and directors. Isenberg argues that Hollywood’s embrace of Earp as a paragon of law and order was his greatest confidence game of all.
Finalist for the 2014 Weber-Clements Book Prize for the Best Non-fiction Book on Southwestern America
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Editorial Reviews
From Booklist
Review
“Meticulous . . . illuminat[es] an entire social milieu . . . Beautifully rendered . . . this new biography is a gem, and includes a touching look at Wyatt's single lifelong friendship with Doc Holliday . . . offer[s] the reader an exciting glimpse into vanished forms of American life. The field of Western history has now entered a phase of precision scholarship, [of] deep research and glorious writing.” ―The Wichita Eagle
“This brief, well-written, and superbly researched volume reconfigures the life of the western notable Wyatt Earp.... Anyone who reads this important book is not likely to view Wyatt Earp the same way.” ―Richard Etulain, Journal of American History
“Absorbing . . . Isenberg's brilliance as a historian comes in part from finding the gaps within the myth . . . Wyatt Earp is part biography, part historical nonfiction that reads like a gripping novel. Like David McCollough, Richard Slotkin, Nathaniel Philbruck, and S.C. Gwynne, Isenberg gives us a narrative of the Old West and 19th century America that's at once edifying and exhilarating in its scope.” ―PopMatters
“his is the best dead-on Earp deconstruction I've ever read. At a time when vigilante action is being widely discussed―when we must ask ourselves if standing one's ground after stalking a black teenager translates into justifiable murder―it’s good to know that, in the old days, the issue was even more shockingly unsettled. Not only did Earp slay with impunity, but he also relied on the media to help him wipe the fingerprints and clean up the blood. Isenberg’s book deftly shows how a man of violence remade himself into a man of valor.” ―Tucson Weekly
“Masterful . . . [the book] will be applauded by those who like their history to adhere more closely to facts.” ―The New Mexican (Santa Fe)
“Isenberg carefully separates the historic from the hysterical, examines documents, evaluates sources critically and eventually scrapes away from Earp's image the gilding that cultural history has applied . . . Isenberg shows us Earp as an early Jay Gatsby, reinventing himself continually.” ―Kirkus Reviews
“Meticulously researched and persuasively argued, this weave of a single life and its constantly changing culture shows how an ambitious, violent man from the Midwest who made his name as a gambler, pimp, and all-around enforcer ultimately took up the cause of remaking his own reputation, with enduring consequences for Hollywood myth and popular lore. No biographer has ever illuminated the origins of Wyatt Earp's legend or captured his complexities and contradictions as compellingly and with such beautiful prose as Andrew C. Isenberg does in Wyatt Earp: A Vigilante Life.” ―Louis S. Warren, author of Buffalo Bill’s America: William Cody and the Wild West Show
“Even Wyatt Earp must sometimes stand naked. Andrew C. Isenberg’s new biography of Earp shows us the man bereft of his own mythologizing―a cardsharp, a flimflam man, and most of all a ruthless self-promoter. This is a remarkable and revealing portrait.” ―Thomas Cobb, author of With Blood in Their Eyes and Crazy Heart
“This book is quite simply absorbing. That a life as tangled, contradictory, mythologized, and disguised as Wyatt Earp's could offer such a clear window into the nineteenth- and twentieth-century West is a tribute to Andrew C. Isenberg's talent as a historian and writer.” ―Richard White, author of Railroaded: The Transcontinentals and the Making of Modern America
“With no ax to grind, and showing respect for even the most outrageous attempts at history and biography (which he systematically disassembles), Andrew C. Isenberg has written a reliable guide to Wyatt Earp's conflicted existence.” ―Loren D. Estleman, author of The Perils of Sherlock Holmes
About the Author
Andrew C. Isenberg is the author of Mining California: An Ecological History and The Destruction of the Bison: An Environmental History, 1750–1920, and the editor of The Nature of Cities: Culture, Landscape, and Urban Space. He is a historian at Temple University.
Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.
Wyatt Earp
A Vigilante Life
By Andrew C. IsenbergFarrar, Straus and Giroux
Copyright © 2014 Andrew C. IsenbergAll rights reserved.
ISBN: 978-0-8090-9869-9
1
LEX TALIONIS
On the night of March 20, 1882, at a train station in Tucson, Arizona Territory, Wyatt Earp, a deputy United States marshal, shot Frank Stilwell, an accused stage-robber and murderer. Wyatt aimed to kill, firing his shotgun into Stilwell’s chest at such close range that powder burns encircled the gaping wound. The shotgun blast alone was a mortal wound, but when a railroad worker discovered Stilwell’s body the next morning, he found that Stillwell had been shot multiple times. Members of Earp’s posse, which included his youngest brother, Warren, and his closest friend, the professional gambler John Henry “Doc” Holliday, had opened fire with their own weapons to make sure of Stilwell’s death. The gunfight was one-sided: Stilwell’s pistol had not been fired.1
By most accounts, Stilwell was a villain. As a deputy sheriff in Cochise County, Arizona, which included the silver boomtown of Tombstone, he was one of several corrupt lawmen who shielded cattle rustlers and stage-robbers from justice. He was in Tucson, seventy-five miles northwest of Tombstone, to face prosecution for having participated in a stage robbery himself. He was at the train station awaiting the arrival of a cowboy who would provide him with an alibi in court—the cowboy was likely prepared to commit perjury. Wyatt had long known Stilwell was a blackguard, but he had another, more important reason to confront him at the train station in Tucson. Two nights earlier, in Tombstone, gunmen had murdered Wyatt’s younger brother Morgan. Witnesses had identified Stilwell as one of Morgan’s killers, and a coroner’s jury in Tombstone had indicted him for the crime.
As Stilwell’s wounds suggested, Wyatt, despite his commission as a deputy U.S. marshal, made no attempt to arrest the accused murderer and bring him before a judge. Wyatt’s experiences with Arizona’s legal system over the previous half year had soured him on courtroom justice. In October 1881, as a deputy police officer in Tombstone serving under his brother Virgil, the town police chief, Wyatt had participated in a gunfight that had left three cowboys dead. (The shoot-out, memorialized as the Gunfight at the O.K. Corral, actually took place in an empty lot behind the corral.) Following the shoot-out, Virgil, Wyatt, and Wyatt’s fellow deputies Morgan and Holliday were accused of murder and endured a monthlong courtroom ordeal. Wyatt spent much of that month in a Tombstone jail cell.2 In late December, confederates of the dead cowboys shotgunned Virgil on a deserted Tombstone street; Virgil survived, but lost the use of his left arm. A cowboy, Ike Clanton, was charged with attempted murder, but in court, seven witnesses swore that Ike had been with them in a mining camp outside Tombstone on the night of the attack.3 Wyatt feared that if Stilwell was brought to court to face charges for Morgan’s murder—which like the shooting of Virgil was in retaliation for the October gunfight—Stilwell’s friends would testify falsely to provide him an alibi.
Accused of murdering Stilwell and, in the days that followed, two other cowboys he suspected of involvement in Morgan’s death, Wyatt fled Arizona. Despite the ignominy of his exit from Tombstone, his role as a vigilante became a crucial part of his eventual status in American popular culture as an icon of law and order, the violent agent of justice on a lawless frontier. On the surface, it seems unlikely, or at least ironic, that a vigilante killer would become a symbol of rectitude. Yet Wyatt’s story appealed to Americans who like him saw justice not in fickle courtrooms, but in the character of stalwarts who were willing to break the law—even to commit murder.
A host of books, films, and television programs propelled Wyatt into his status as the iconic vigilante lawman.4 In 1931, a biography, Wyatt Earp: Frontier Marshal, by Stuart N. Lake, cast Wyatt as an Old West version of an FBI agent and his Tombstone enemies as an organized-crime ring. Like Eliot Ness or Melvin Purvis, Lake implied, Wyatt rightly resorted to extralegal justice because of the brutality of his enemies and the corruption of local police and judges. During the early years of the Cold War, the icon of the resolute lawman became a symbol of resistance to communism. Such resistance was so violent, in Western films such as 1957’s Gunfight at the O.K. Corral, which starred Burt Lancaster as Wyatt, that the lawman inevitably remained outside of the civil society he protected.5 In late 2001, when President George W. Bush vowed to get Osama bin Laden “dead or alive,” he summoned up the Earp icon of the frontier lawman willing to go outside of the law in the pursuit of justice. On September 19, 2001, a columnist for the Hartford Courant referred to the “dead or alive” vow as “Wyatt Earp rhetoric.”6 In 2010, one year before the Justice Department indicted his office for discriminating against Mexican Americans, Sheriff Joe Arpaio of Maricopa County, Arizona, created an armed “immigration posse” to inderdict suspected illegal aliens. One of the posse’s members was a Phoenix man, Wyatt Earp, who was not only the namesake of the 1880s Arizona lawman but claimed to be his nephew. Across three-quarters of a century, in battles against organized crime, Soviet communism, Islamist terrorism, and illegal immigration, Americans have invoked the Earp icon to rationalize the extralegal pursuit of justice.
Yet the Wyatt Earp of the nineteenth-century American West was not the film icon familiar to modern Americans. While the Hollywood version is stubbornly, consistently duty-bound, in actuality Wyatt led a life of restlessness, inconstancy, impulsive law-breaking, and shifting identities. Beginning in his late teens, he rarely lived more than a year or two in one place. For much of his life, he was both hunter and hunted: he was a lawman in Missouri, Kansas, and Arizona; he was also a fugitive in Colorado and saw the inside of jail cells in Arkansas, Illinois, Arizona, and California. He was the grandson of a Methodist preacher and struck most of the educated, genteel, religiously minded people who knew him as a paragon of probity; he also spent most of his life working in brothels, saloons, and gambling halls. When he was not wearing a badge, he was variously a thief, brothel bouncer, professional gambler, and confidence man who specialized in selling gold bricks that were nothing more than rocks painted yellow.
His hasty exit from Arizona in 1882 was not the first time that an impulsive criminal act had forced him to become a fugitive. In 1871, he broke out of jail in Arkansas after being arrested for horse theft. In 1872, he left Peoria, Illinois, following a string of arrests for consorting with prostitutes. In 1876, officials in Wichita, Kansas, declared him a vagrant and banished him after he assaulted a candidate for town marshal on the eve of a municipal election. In each case, Wyatt left behind his scandals, moved to a fresh town where he was largely or entirely unknown, and reinvented himself. In the narrowly localized society of the 1870s, a man such as Wyatt who was willing to pull up stakes and remake his reputation in a new town could outrun his past.
These reinventions often meant abandoning old partners—men and women—for new ones. In Wichita, he left behind his police partner, Jimmy Cairns, with whom he had shared a bed. When he fled Arizona, he abandoned Mattie Blaylock, a woman with whom he had lived for years. Indeed, Wyatt changed partners nearly as often as he changed occupations and addresses. He had three wives over the course of his life; a fourth woman, a prostitute at a brothel where Wyatt worked, once claimed to be his wife. He maintained close relationships with two men; in addition to Cairns, his friendship with Holliday was so close that it was described by one contemporary as romantic.
Self-invention has a long history in America. In the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, self-invention was closely related to the powerful American belief in the possibilities of moral betterment and upward social mobility. Benjamin Franklin was the prototype for this kind of self-made man; in his autobiography Franklin depicted himself, not entirely without justification, as a runaway servant who rose to wealth and prominence through hard work and virtuous self-denial. In the latter part of the nineteenth century, an ex–divinity student, Horatio Alger, Jr., heralded the American creed of rags-to-respectability mobility through a series of stories aimed at boys and girls. Alger’s protagonists were bootblacks and pickpockets who, after experiencing a conversion to the Whiggish creed of upward mobility, righted themselves to become churchgoing entrepreneurs.7
Wyatt’s version of self-invention differed from that of Franklin and Alger. Socially, his family was downwardly mobile. He had been born into an extended family of churchgoing, Whiggish strivers who adhered to values of hard work. Yet when Wyatt was still a boy, his father, Nicholas, disappointed by a series of financial and legal setbacks, lost his faith in the promise of upward mobility. By the time Wyatt was in his teens, his father had become an inveterate liar who invented for himself the achievements that had eluded him in life. Like his father, Wyatt embraced the prerogative of self-invention, and like him, he eschewed the self-denial that Franklin and Alger maintained was essential to upward mobility. As an adult, Wyatt convincingly acted the part of the upright lawman, but was never willing to sacrifice gambling, prostitutes, confidence games, or petty crimes to become one completely.
The role of the solitary, dutiful lawman was thus one of many identities the protean Wyatt took on and cast off in his life. So, too, was the role of vigilante. His resort to vigilantism in 1882 was not the act of a man unwaveringly committed to justice in a frontier territory where the courts were corrupt, but the impulsive vengeance of a man who had long disdained authority. He donned and shucked off roles readily, whipsawing between lawman and lawbreaker, and pursued his changing ambitions recklessly, with little thought to the cost to himself, and still less thought to the cost, even the deadly cost, to others.
Yet Hollywood vindicated the vigilante, turning Wyatt into an icon of law and order. His plastic identity and penchant for reinvention freely lent itself to Hollywood mythmaking. Consumed in his last years with justifying his resort to deadly violence in Arizona, he told and retold stories of his life as a law officer in Tombstone and in the Kansas cow towns of Wichita and Dodge City in the 1870s. His tales were as inconsistent and changeable as his life itself: he edited out his missteps and embarrassments, inflated his accomplishments, and appropriated the deeds of others as his own. He spent the last two decades of his life living primarily in Los Angeles and becoming a fixture at Hollywood studios. Befriending Western silent-film actors and directors, he presented himself to them as a lawman singularly committed to justice.
One of those actors, William S. Hart, convinced Wyatt that a memoir, presented either in book form or serialized in a popular magazine such as the Saturday Evening Post, should be the basis for a film script. In the late 1910s, Wyatt collaborated on such a memoir with Forrestine Hooker, the author of somewhat formulaic children’s stories and the daughter-in-law of an Arizona rancher whom Wyatt had known. Although Hooker’s manuscript presented Wyatt in a flattering light, he was dissatisfied with it, or perhaps was not yet ready to settle on a definitive account of a life he had so often reinvented. He steered the manuscript into a desk drawer to be forgotten and did what he was long practiced at doing: he began again with a new narrative. His new collaborator was John Flood, a young friend who regarded Wyatt with unqualified admiration. Yet fidelity proved a poor substitute for ability: Flood struggled with the task of writing Wyatt’s biography for two years, eventually producing a convoluted manuscript that was rejected by all of the publishers to whom Hart sent it.
After a decade of false starts, Wyatt settled on Lake, a former journalist and aspiring screenwriter, to write his biography. Yet even as Wyatt reminisced to Lake during the spring of 1928, in what turned out to be the last year of his life, he carefully edited his past. He had long hidden his youthful arrests even from some of his own family. He repeated to Lake many of the same stories he had told his family—for instance, that he had spent the early 1870s hunting bison in the southern plains, when in fact he was compiling a criminal record in Arkansas and Illinois. Wyatt did not intend to arouse Lake’s suspicions by mentioning that as recently as 1911 officers of the Los Angeles police’s bunco squad had arrested him for running a crooked faro game. Yet he need not have worried. Lake, eager to make his literary reputation by casting himself as Boswell to Wyatt’s Samuel Johnson, polished Wyatt’s tales to a high shine. The icon conjured by Wyatt and Lake quickly made its way onto the screen, just as Wyatt had hoped, dominating the American memory of Wyatt for a half century. Unlike those Horatio Alger strivers who invented a better future for themselves, Wyatt invented for himself a better past. Though Wyatt, who died in 1929, did not live to see it, Hollywood’s embrace of him as a paragon of law and order was the realization of his last and undoubtedly his greatest confidence game, his surest revenge, and his most complete reinvention.
Copyright © 2013 by Andrew C. Isenberg
Map and family tree copyright © 2013 by Angelica Maez Edgington
(Continues...)Excerpted from Wyatt Earp by Andrew C. Isenberg. Copyright © 2014 Andrew C. Isenberg. Excerpted by permission of Farrar, Straus and Giroux.
All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site.
Product details
- ASIN : B009LRWHV8
- Publisher : Hill and Wang; 1st edition (June 25, 2013)
- Publication date : June 25, 2013
- Language : English
- File size : 5.6 MB
- Text-to-Speech : Enabled
- Screen Reader : Supported
- Enhanced typesetting : Enabled
- X-Ray : Not Enabled
- Word Wise : Enabled
- Print length : 321 pages
- Best Sellers Rank: #457,015 in Kindle Store (See Top 100 in Kindle Store)
- #128 in History of Southwestern U.S.
- #184 in History of Western U.S.
- #777 in Biographies & Memoirs of Criminals
- Customer Reviews:
About the author

Andrew C. Isenberg is the Hall Distinguished Professor of American History at the University of Kansas. He was born in Chicago and studied at St. Olaf College and Northwestern University. He specializes in American environmental history and the history of the North American West.
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Customers find the book to be an excellent read with meticulous research, and one review describes it as a great source of information about the old west. The writing is well-executed, and customers find it inexorably interesting, with one noting how it cuts through the mythology surrounding Wyatt Earp.
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Customers find the book to be an excellent read.
"...This is an excellent book." Read more
"...By all means, give this important book a read if you are interested in American character...." Read more
"...Portrays Earp as a man of his times Really good read" Read more
"Great book but I have my doubts about the author thinking about Wyatt & Doc Hollidays relationship...." Read more
Customers praise the book's meticulous research, with one customer noting it provides a comprehensive and informative account of the Old West, while another mentions it clears up many questions about Wyatt Earp's life.
"A very eye opening comprehensive informative account of who and what Wyatt Earp really was. This book really goes deep into what made him tick...." Read more
"Well written, balanced writing about the real Wyatt Earp Meticulously researched, sharing facts vs the legend created by Lake..." Read more
"It's not a very engaging book considering the subject's multiple "reinventions"...." Read more
"Excellent reading ! Great source of information about the old west." Read more
Customers find the book interesting, with one review noting how it goes deep into what made Wyatt Earp tick and cuts through the mythology surrounding him.
"...This book really goes deep into what made him tick...." Read more
"Also interesting." Read more
"...Casey Tefertiller mined these hills back in 1997 in his inexorably interesting and entertainingly exhaustive WYATT EARP: THE LIFE BEHIND THE LEGEND...." Read more
"This book gave a clear understanding of Wyatt Earp...." Read more
Customers praise the writing quality of the book.
"This ia an exceptionally well written book. It covers the background of the Earp family and it sets them in the context of the time and place...." Read more
"Well written, balanced writing about the real Wyatt Earp Meticulously researched, sharing facts vs the legend created by Lake..." Read more
"...The writing was clear and precise. I thoroughly enjoyed the book." Read more
"A well-written biography that cuts through the mythology of Earp, Tombstone and the west. Highly recommended. Best, JS" Read more
Top reviews from the United States
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- Reviewed in the United States on February 4, 2025A very eye opening comprehensive informative account of who and what Wyatt Earp really was. This book really goes deep into what made him tick. It was fascinating to learn about the “ not so law and order” man that he was and about the amount of run ins he had with the justice system ….as an accused criminal.
- Reviewed in the United States on October 2, 2013It's not a very engaging book considering the subject's multiple "reinventions". Wyatt almost becomes a secondary character to his father and brothers. Demythologizing western heroes in my view has become passe. Earp has to have been more engaging than he is presented by Isenberg,if only by virtue of his travels and multiple careers. I can't recommend this book,
- Reviewed in the United States on June 7, 2018This ia an exceptionally well written book. It covers the background of the Earp family and it sets them in the context of the time and place. The character of Wyatt Earp and his brothers is set out with all the complexity and contradictions that allow the reader to see them as real human being. The historical forces that were affecting the West are also explained the move from a largely ranching community to mining and cities and the political cross currents at play are placed in context. This is an excellent book.
- Reviewed in the United States on July 16, 2013Eric Isenberg has done a decent job of taking a position and explaining himself. He believes that Wyatt Earp was a con man and gambler who reinvented himself every time he moved from place to place; a man, who, in fact, moved in order to reinvent himself according the code of masculinity of the time. It is Isenberg’s discussion of this code of masculinity that I find most interesting, not anything supposedly new that he has to say about Earp.
Isenberg does not really turn up anything that no one had turned up before. I’ve not done a whole lot of original research on the Earp brothers, but I did find what I considered a few glitches that indicated Isenberg had not entirely immersed himself in the literature. He called the place where Earp claimed to have killed Curly Bill Brocius “Burleigh Springs,” for instance, and most folks who are familiar with the story know that it was given that name only once by the Tombstone EPITAPH, and thereafter most folks relating the story called it Iron Springs. The general consensus is that the EPITAPH used the name Burleigh Springs to mislead the reading public at the time.
And I admit to dismissing his interpretation of the O’Rourke affair as soon as I read it. Again, I didn’t think that was the point of the book. Minor interpretations of historic events don’t necessarily matter, although they are interesting fodder for discussion in forums that like that sort of thing.
What I DID find interesting was the fact that Earp’s brother-in-law, William Edwards, presented him with a copy of Owen Wister’s THE VIRGINIAN, and Isenberg believes he was inspired to reinvent himself in the form of the gunfighter hero of that novel (pp. 202-204). The notion fits with what I talk about in THAT FIEND IN HELL, when I write “Legends are the stories we tell ourselves to reinforce our myths, which articulate our value systems. One builds upon the other, feeding back and forth. History becomes shaped by legend. Myth shapes how we express our perception of history. Legend becomes historic fact” (p. 211).
I think where Isenberg missed the boat was in not taking the next step. It is not important what Wyatt Earp thought of himself. What is important is what the rest of the world thought of him. Why, if Isenberg is correct about Earp’s criminal background, has he become the legend he is today? It is not because Earp continually reinvented himself, but because Earp as he viewed himself and what others – such as Bat Masterson and journalists in San Francisco and Stuart Lake and Walter Noble Burns – saw in his story the makings of a legendary hero and his contribution to American myth.
By all means, give this important book a read if you are interested in American character. It tells us all a great deal about ourselves as Americans, far more than about a con man and gambler of the nineteenth century. – Catherine Holder Spude, Author of “THAT FIEND IN HELL”: SOAPY SMITH IN LEGEND.
- Reviewed in the United States on March 6, 2022Well written, balanced writing about the real Wyatt Earp
Meticulously researched, sharing facts vs the legend created by Lake
Portrays Earp as a man of his times
Really good read
- Reviewed in the United States on June 28, 2013What the reviewer has to say seems to reflect that either s/he hasn't read the book, or if s/he has they didn't pay much attention. To anyone with an open mind the book is a thoroughly researched and documented portrait of this conflicted and highly mythologized figure. The author is trying to do exactly what the reviewer embodies in his/her "review" (which is actually an ad hominem character assassination designed to discredit the book sight unseen): overcome the myth of Earp as an upright lawman, when he actually lived on and played both sides of the law for almost his entire life - a myth many people have a personal and professional stake in protecting. To ignore the evidence and the conclusions it leads to is the shoddy part. Just read the book and you'll see that the historical record describes not only Earp the tough and fearless enforcer (which he was) but also Earp the brothel bouncer, horse thief, absconder of public funds, fugitive, and vigilante who shaped his past in order to create the kind of legend the reviewer completely buys into.
- Reviewed in the United States on December 23, 2014Also interesting.
Top reviews from other countries
- BeamerdogReviewed in Canada on May 13, 2017
3.0 out of 5 stars Three Stars
Much better books on this subject.
- ShirleyReviewed in Australia on September 9, 2015
4.0 out of 5 stars Four Stars
Very informative
- ian bennettReviewed in the United Kingdom on October 18, 2017
5.0 out of 5 stars Wyatt Earp, Hero Are Con Man
Excellent Book, Well Researched, Shows The Famous Law Man, Warts And All,Although I Have Read Many Books On Wyatt Earp, This Book Surprised Me, With All This Extra Information, Most Of Which Is Uncomplimentary, A Great Read Though.
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CorrêaReviewed in Brazil on January 13, 2019
5.0 out of 5 stars Historia interessante
Produto muito bom, estou satisfeito com a compra
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Amazon CustomerReviewed in France on December 21, 2024
1.0 out of 5 stars Nul
Ce livre est un pamphlet contre le personnage et non une biographie objective et bien sourcée. Le livre dépeint Wyatt Earp comme un criminel, homosexuel, qui utilisait la force de la loi pour servir ses intérêts personnels. Les sources sont biaisées, et on reconnaît la patte de certains critiques anti Earp.
On sent également très fort l'orientation anticapitaliste et gauchiste de l'auteur, pour qui les hommes de loi sont souvent des bandits vénaux, et les bandits sont des hommes bien qui ont eu de mauvaises fréquentations...
Le seul aspect intéressant est le tableau sociologique de l'Ouest américain au 19è siècle.
Si vous voulez une biographie de Wyatt Earp, essayez plutôt Wyatt Earp: frontier Marshal ou la biographie écrite par Teterfiler, qui sont bien plus fidèles.