This year’s theme for Black History Month, chosen by the Association for the Study of African American Life and History, is “African Americans and Labor”. Today’s Book Club Spotlight by author Gary Paulsen takes a well-deserving look at a Black man who not only served his community faithfully through his work but excelled far above his station. ALA Notable Book and One Book for Nebraska Teens 2017, The Legend of Bass Reeves, is at once a historical fiction novel and historical fact. Known for his outdoor adventure novels, Paulsen writes vignettes based on the life of Bass Reeves, interspersing them with historical background, making the case for Reeves to be the one true hero of the West.
An illiterate runaway slave, Bass Reeves was the true, unknown icon of the Western Frontier. Despite facing down the barrel of a gun countless times, he was never injured, and he never shot first. Having daringly escaped slavery at 17, Bass lived free in the lawless land of Indian Territory- run by gangs and thieves. After saving one of their own from wolves, he finds companionship and family with the Muscogee Creek people for over 20 years. Never one to slow or turn down a challenge, at the age of 51, Reeves took up the badge and became the most successful and feared Deputy Federal Marshal of the West, his life story rivaled only by the fictional Lone Ranger.
“They could kill him, but they’d never own him again.”
-Gary Paulsen
For readers 10 and up, The Legend of Bass Reeves is a mostly fictional account of the real man. Unfortunately, as an illiterate former slave, Reeves did not keep any journals, and not much was written about him while he was alive. Paulsen sets out to right some of this wrong, pulling Reeves from obscurity. For his young audience, Paulsen wanted to give the unstoppable and honorable Bass Reeves his due instead of the outlaws like Billy the Kid and Butch Cassidy. The Legend of Bass Reeves, while about the heroic man, also delves into the lawless West, from the makeup of the land, the communities, and the treatment of Black and Native peoples in an accessible way for young readers to understand and any Book Club Group to discuss the finer points of.
If you’re interested in requesting The Legend of Bass Reeves for your book club, you can find the Request Form here. There are 11 copies. (A librarian must request items)
Paulsen, Gary. The Legend of Bass Reeves. Random House. 2006.