Thad and Charlie Dick - Book By Lewis B. Miller

Synopsis:

These are the names of the main characters, these are the boys that our author has selected for a novel to bring frontier life to realism. Perhaps the author knew these boys well, even if they were eight or ten years older. Like other boys they dreamed of things out of their reach, and had the necessary courage to achieve. They encountered many things only dreamed of by todays boys such as wild cats, the wild man, and of course had many close escapes from the perils of the Comanches. They also encountered things that might relate to boys of all time, like being spanked for trying to steal melons from Mr. Harbolt’s melon patch. These stories hold lessons for all boys and men - the value of honesty and respect for each other, in times of trial or times of grace that may be embedded in the minds of youth and produce lasting qualities of life which are indispensable.

About the Author:

Among the least known but better authors of tales of adventure in the late nineteenth and early twentieth century era was Texan Lewis B. Miller, whose stories appeared in serial form in a weekly farm paper, The National Stockman and Farmer, and a regional edition of the publication, The Pennsylvania Stockman and Farmer. Lewis B. Miller was born at Blocker Creek, Cooke County, Texas, on May 27, 1861. His father’s name was Henry Miller and his mother Lurilla Osburn Miller. He received his early education in frontier schools in Texas. In 1881 he obtained an A.B. degree at Texas Christian University. He moved to Marlin, Texas, in 1931, apparently to live with relatives, and died there on July 26, 1933. He was buried at Hico, Texas, which is about 70 miles southwest of Fort Worth. Lewis B. Miller was an excellent writer with a good education, and his stories were very accurate from a geographical and historical standpoint. He wrote adult, young adult tales of adventure, dealings with frontier life, cattle driving. His base writing is about the southwest frontier pushing civilization into the wild west, French and Spanish territories or into the Indian’s hunting grounds. Besides frontier life, his novels cover a wide field of subjects, such as: homesteading, trapping, hunting, fur trading, logging, rafting, gold-seeking, Indian life and about all that confronted frontier life which most Americans have forgotten and many have never known. Many early American statesmen and patriotic pioneers appear in his stories, who are authentic. The frontier stories involved confrontation with the Indians and the hard life of the pioneers. Due to the fact that Miller’s stories appeared originally only in a farm weekly, they did not receive a wide circulation and thus remained unknown to much of the reading public. This neglect has been partially corrected by a small church foundation press in Pennsylvania. They have published a number of soft cover reprints of his work and more are pending. For those who collect adventure books for the pleasure of reading, there can be no better investment than in Lewis B. Miller tales.

By Robert E. Walters