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| Rattlesnakes | 
| Author: J. Frank Dobie Publisher: Castle Books Category: Book
List Price: $9.99 Buy New: $2.95 You Save: $7.04 (70%)
New (15) Collectible (1) from $2.95
Avg. Customer Rating: 2 reviews Sales Rank: 335059
Media: Hardcover Number Of Items: 1 Pages: 201 Shipping Weight (lbs): 1 Dimensions (in): 8.6 x 5.8 x 0.9
ISBN: 0785813748 Dewey Decimal Number: 599 EAN: 9780785813743 ASIN: 0785813748
Publication Date: March 2002 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Condition: New - may have a small remainder mark on the edge.
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Product Description
Here are observations and speculations, legends and yarns, even gossip about the habits and dispositions of these extraordinary creaturesrattlesnakestheir reported size, deadliness, and power to charm their natural enemies. Here are descriptions of actual fights to the death between rattlesnakes and other animals and accounts of the strange experiences human beings have had with them, as well as tips on where to find them and how to act when you see one. Dobie began systematically collecting lore about the rattlesnake world many years ago, using some of it in such regional publications as Southwest Review and incorporating much of it into essayswith the intention of eventually putting together a book about rattlesnakes. Now, in this collection of twenty-two articles, his wish is posthumously fulfilled. Only Frank Dobie could tell of this fascinating and frightening creature with such wisdom and humor, thereby tempering "the age-old feud between the snake and man." And the rattlesnakewho once aroused fear among even the boldest men in the Old Westcan at last be regarded with tolerance, respect, and even affection.
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| Customer Reviews:
Narrow Fellows in the Grass March 16, 2008 3 out of 3 found this review helpful
J. Frank Dobie was a wonderful collector of folklore, particularly the folklore emanating from west Texas and the ranching country of the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. Most universities in that part of the United States offer a course in their English departments entitled "Life and Literature of the Southwest" or something comparable, and one is very likely to meet at least some of Dobie's many books in these courses. Naturally, anyone who is curious about southwestern folklore can always create a self-conducted course for himself, and Dobie should certainly be one of the authors represented in that course.
In RATTLESNAKES, Dobie presents a collection of folklore revolving around the topic of those fanged vipers whose warning rattle has been heard by generations of frontiersmen, including quite a few modern-day folks who have chosen to build their homes in the snakes' habitat. These accounts range widely in their subject matter, including the size to which rattlesnakes can grow, whether a snake's bite is poisonous to itself, attacks on snakes by birds ranging from roadrunners to eagles, homegrown remedies for rattlesnake bites, cat and dog behavior around rattlesnakes, use of snake venom by American Natives to poison arrow and spear tips, and even a few supernatural appearances by the snakes.
Because the book is a collection of many tales concerning almost every imaginable aspect of rattlesnakes, it does not read like a unified story from cover to cover. In construction, the narrative is very much episodic, and, as one might expect, the various episodes range in quality and memorability, some being rather prosaic and a few quite imaginative. Because there is no story line per se or even a specific chronological sequence of events, I find parts of the book already fading from memory, although some of the better-recounted stories certainly linger. Dobie also starts right in with his collection of stories about rattlesnakes, giving us neither introduction nor conclusion; in fact, for the most part he is scarcely seen in the book, for he is generally recounting the words of others from whom he has come by these many stories.
We should, I suppose, emphasize the fact that this is a collection of tales and folklore about rattlesnakes, not in any sense a scientific treatise on the creatures, and the author makes very few pronouncements as to the veracity of the stories he repeats to us. RATTLESNAKES is also a book for those who enjoy folklore in its natural, "unenhanced" state. It is not a professional, unified fictional story nor yet a scientific inquiry, but a compilation of many laymen's stories about the animals. If I may use an analogy with folk music, this is more like an album of Leadbelly songs than of Bob Dylan, Joan Baez, or Peter, Paul and Mary. It is a presentation of stories in their raw and unpolished state.
While perhaps not equal in readability to many of Dobie's other works, nonetheless RATTLESNAKES is a decent addition to the recorded folklore of the American southwest, and I believe that both the Texas folklorist and the Dobie afficionado will find it of interest. As for its contribution to recorded folklore, I would surely rate it with at least four or perhaps even five Amazon stars; the three-star rating I have used reflects my feelings concerning the book's ability to generate and hold the interest of a general reader and my disappointment at not finding more of Dobie's own words in the text. Still, if you, gentle reader, want to know why no sane man will find himself on top of Cedar Mound hill in western Oklahoma on the night of the first full moon in October, or why the discoverer of the lost San Saba Mine abandoned the gold coins he found stashed there, then by all means consult this book!
Texas Rattler Lore December 28, 1998 9 out of 11 found this review helpful
I read this 'bout 20 years ago, and it was fascinating then, as it is now. Mr. Dobie brings to us the Texas legendry and lore surrounding the rattlesnake, both in humor and seriousness. Great book.
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