Description: SUN UP - TALES OF COW CAMPS, authored and illustrated by WILL JAMES; Hardcover, 1931. See images for content of initial pages and indication of condition. Some peeling of spine and edgewear. Binding is tight and pages are clean and crisp. Not a first edition, but certainly an early printing in 1931. The book would make a brilliant birthday or Christmas gift for an American West enthusiast of any age. Will James (1892 - 1942) was a French Canadian artist and writer of the American West. He is known for writing Smoky the Cowhorse, for which he won the 1927 Newbery Medal, and numerous "cowboy" stories for adults and children. His artwork, which predominantly involved cowboy and rodeo scenes, followed "in the tradition of Charles Russell", and much of it was used to illustrate his books. In 1992, he was inducted into the Hall of Great Westerners of the National Cowboy & Western Heritage Museum. James was born Joseph Ernest Nephtali Dufault, in 1892 in Saint-Nazaire-d'Acton, Quebec, Canada, although later, when he began mythologizing his life and in his autobiography, he claimed he was born in Montana. He accounted for his French accent by claiming that after his mother died when he was 1 (from influenza) and his father when he was 4 (having been gored by a steer), he was adopted by a French-Canadian fur trader ("old trapper Jean" Beaupré, whom he called "Bopy" since childhood), who was not fluent in English. James settled near the new French-Saskatchewan settlement of Val Marie in 1910 and learned to be a western cowboy. He was taught wrangling by local cowboy Pierre Beaupre, and the two built separate homesteads along the Frenchman River in southwest Saskatchewan. James's property later became part of the Walt Larson ranch, which has been folded into the new Grasslands National Park.James migrated to the United States, where he assumed the new name William Roderick James. He came to Nevada from Montana in 1914. He was arrested there for cattle rustling and was sentenced to twelve to eighteen months in prison, which he served first in Ely, Nevada, and then at the Nevada State Penitentiary at Carson City. While in prison he concentrated on his drawing and produced pictures that the Ely Record commended with the recommendation that "with proper training he would soon be able to do first class work." At the state penitentiary he used his art in connection with his parole application, making a sketch entitled "A Turning Point," with the note: "Have had ample time for serious thought and it is my ambition to follow up on my art." According to cowboy and folksinger Ian Tyson, James traveled to San Francisco to sell sketches and began working as a stuntman in western movies there. Soon he was in the U.S. Army, serving from 1918 to 1919. It was after his discharge that he began artwork in earnest. He returned to Nevada, arriving in Reno in July in time for the First Annual Nevada Round-Up in Reno, for which he illustrated the cover of the program and was paid $50. He also worked as a horse wrangler for the round-up. In Reno, James soon teamed up with two men he knew before the war, Fred Conradt and Elmer Freel, to stage "broncobusting" exhibitions. During one of these events, James was thrown from a horse and sustained a severe concussion when he landed headfirst on a railroad track. He convalesced at the Conradt household.
Price: 47.97 USD
Location: Raleigh, North Carolina
End Time: 2025-01-11T02:56:15.000Z
Shipping Cost: 6.88 USD
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Provenance: Ownership History Not Available
Country/Region of Manufacture: United States
Modified Item: No
Culture: Western Americana