James B. Hendryx
Personal Information
Description
James Beardsley Hendryx was born in Sauk Centre, Minnesota, the son of the owner and publisher of the local newspaper. He grew up with the novelist Sinclair Lewis. As a boy, Hendryx and his friends were amateur woodsmen, skilled at hunting, fishing, trapping, swimming, and riding boxcars. In 1899 Hendryx studied law at the University of Minnesota (which he paid for in part by running weekly poker games), but he left after one year and decided to travel the country. Before he was out of his 20s he had worked several jobs, including selling hardware and life insurance, buying bark for a tannery in Kentucky, running levels on a proposed electric railway in Ohio, book-keeping for a sheep-shearing plant, punching cattle on several big spreads in Montana and Saskatchewan. While in Montana, he met two notorious outlaws, Kid and Lonny Curry, members of the Wild Bunch who were hiding out in the mountains. In 1898 Hendryx and a friend took $1,400 in poker winnings and went to pan gold in the Yukon. They found that they had arrived too late into the gold rush: their claims were poor and the cost of living in the Yukon too high. After 14 months, he took a position on a salmon boat and landed in Vancouver, spent another year punching cattle, and then drifted to Cincinnati where his father was editing a newspaper. Hendryx got a job writing feature stories for a different newspaper, then sold his first piece of fiction and quit working to become a full-time writer. His first novel, The Promise, was published in 1915. He married and in 1921 he bought 300 acres of forest land on Grand Traverse Bay in Michigan, settling in the former resort hotel. Over the next 30 years he wrote more than 70 novels and many short stories of outdoor adventure. Many of his stories were serialized in "The American Boy". Although he wrote primarily as a means to spend most of his time hunting and fishing, he was a careful craftsman. He made at least one trip each year to Ottawa to consult with authorities of the Royal Canadian Mounted in Ottawa and to get new maps of the wilderness areas so he could be accurate in his fiction.
Books
The Texan
Joan Johnston, the New York Times-bestselling author of The Cowboy, casts her beguiling spell once again in her breathtaking new novel. Set against a majestic backdrop of sprawling modern-day Texas, The Texan weaves a tale of two feuding families--the Blackthornes and the Creeds--and of two extraordinary people, loner Owen Blackthorne and beautiful, headstrong Bayleigh Creed, irresistibly drawn to each other despite the desperate odds against their love.Owen Blackthorne was a lone wolf, a man who didn't need anyone. Until Bayleigh Creed appeared on his doorstep, demanding his help in locating her missing brother. They headed into the desolate West Texas wilderness together, a Blackthorne and a Creed, mortal enemies obliged to join forces to survive. Neither counted on the unwanted attraction that drew them together, or the bitter truths that would force them apart. Until the ruthless wilderness compelled them to make life-and-death choices--between family ... and duty ... and love.From the Paperback edition.
The stampeders
"Til Carter found adventure when he headed north into Alaska. The beautiful redhead Julie Condon wanted him to settle down and buy a safe claim, but Til was on hand when the big strike came and the stampede that followed proved to Julie and the other skeptics that gold--like adventure--is where you find it"--
The Promise
The way of the North
After his father disappeared under suspicion of committing murder, Tom Jorden had grown up bitter. Gold-hunting in the Yukon would prove to be the young man's testing ground.
