This classic Western is a profoundly moving story of the influence of a singular character on one boy's life.
The Starrett family's life forever changes when a man named Shane rides out of the great glowing West and up to their farm.
Young Bob Starrett is entranced by this stoic stranger who brings a new energy to his family. Shane stays on as a farmhand, but his past remains a mystery. Many folks in their small Wyoming valley are suspicious of Shane and make it known that he is not welcome.
But dangerous as Shane may seem, he is a staunch friend to the Starretts--and when a powerful neighboring rancher tries to drive them out of their homestead, Shane becomes entangled in the deadly feud.
"If you read only one Western in your life, this is the one." (Roland Smith, author of the Peak Marcello adventure novels)
I had lain in my bed thinking of our visitor out in the bunk in the barn. It scarce seemed possible that he was the same man I had first seen, stern and chilling in his dark solitude, riding up our road. Something in father, something not of words or of actions but of the essential substance of the human spirit, had reached out and spoken to him and he had replied to it and had unlocked a part of himself to us. He was far off and unapproachable at times even when he was right there with you.
Wendell Minor is the celebrated illustrator of more than forty picture books for children. His work reflects his deep interest in American history and American landscape and his desire to bring the natural world to children. He lives with his wife, author Florence Friedmann Minor. Visit him at www.minorart.com.
New York Times best-selling author Roland Smith is the author of nearly thirty young adult novels including Peak, The Edge, Beneath, Above, Sasquatch, Elephant Run, Zach's Lie, Shatterproof (39 Clues), the Cryptid Hunters series, the I, Q series, and the Storm Runner series. His novels have garnered dozens of state and national book awards. He lives in Arkansas.
Journalist, digital writer, playwright and novelist ("A Christmas Eve Story"), plus lover of movies and cats. Find me at https://t.co/KscUZ5EZ7u
April 24 1953 was the premiere of Shane. Jack Schaefer's enjoyable novel becomes a mythic tale of a mysterious gunfighter who wants to settle down, but must face an epic battle with the Man In Black. Fantastic film; Brandon deWilde and Jack Palance both got Oscar nods. Superb. https://t.co/5NlwNsYLPb
Connoisseur of fine action sequences.
#OTD George Stevens' Shane (1953) had its premiere in New York City. A superior western, and screen adaptation of Jack Schaefer's 1949 novel, which stars Alan Ladd in the titular role as Shane, a gunfighter turned farmhand who protects a community of settlers from a cattle baron. https://t.co/z06hMqj2BB
I make figure drawings and talk incessantly about minutiae related to the Old West and Western films. https://t.co/2Sw9OBuoef
@Mongo4570 @wildwestxtra I'd also recommend the novel by Jack Schaefer (author of Shane), which is pretty different from both films. Robert B. Parker (author of Appaloosa) was a writer on the Selleck film & he claimed it was going to stick closer to the novel, but it was just a remake of the 70s film.
"Taut, grim, unforgettable." -- Chicago Tribune
"Narrative and literary superiority." -- Kirkus Reviews