Discover millions of ebooks, audiobooks, and so much more with a free trial

Only $11.99/month after trial. Cancel anytime.

Unavailable
Heaven is a Long Way Off
Unavailable
Heaven is a Long Way Off
Unavailable
Heaven is a Long Way Off
Audiobook9 hours

Heaven is a Long Way Off

Written by Win Blevins

Narrated by Ed Sala

Rating: 3 out of 5 stars

3/5

()

Currently unavailable

Currently unavailable

About this audiobook

Win Blevins has won popular and critical acclaim for his sweeping Western Rendezvous saga. Heaven Is a Long Way Off finds Sam Morgan mourning the loss of his wife Meadowlark and determined to rescue his kidnapped daughter. But his journey is fraught with danger as Mexican authorities, Mojave Indians, and a host of other obstacles stand in his way.
LanguageEnglish
Release dateFeb 1, 2012
ISBN9781407497754
Unavailable
Heaven is a Long Way Off
Author

Win Blevins

“I came naturally by my yen to wander far places, physical, imaginary, and spiritual...”-Win Blevins Win Blevins, of Cherokee, Irish and Welsh descent, is from a family that was on the move, always west. Win's childhood was spent roaming, his dad a railroad man. Win went to school in St. Louis, and the family spent summers in little towns along the tracks of the railroads. He listened to the whistles blow at night and wanted to go wherever the trains went. Seldom has a young man been in more of a hurry. Using scholarships, Win ran through a succession of colleges, receiving his master's degree, with honors, in English from Columbia University. He taught at Purdue University and Franklin College, then received a fellowship to attend USC. Win became a newspaperman - a music, theater, and film critic for both major Los Angeles papers. In 1972 he took the big leap-he quit his job to write out his passions-exploring and learning wild places-full time. His greatest passion of all has been to set the stories of these places, their people and animals, colors and smells, into books. Win climbed mountains for ten years. A fluke blizzard caught him on a mountaintop and froze his feet, an end to climbing mountains, but not to exploring them. He's rafted rivers in the west, particularly the Snake and the San Juan, and was briefly a river guide. His love of the great Yellowstone River gave him a fine appreciation for the people who first loved these wild places. Along the way, Win lost the use of his legs and learned to sail, deciding a boat was a good place for a man without legs. He regained the use of his legs, and maintains his love of the open seas. His first book, Give Your Heart to the Hawks, is still in print after thirty years. Other works include Stone Song, a novel about Crazy Horse, for which he won the 1996 Mountains and Plains Booksellers Award and the 1996 Spur Award. He's written multiple books, including a Dictionary of the American West, numerous screenplays and magazine articles. He lives quietly in the canyon country of Utah. His passions grow with time-his wife Meredith, the center of his life, their five kids and grandkids. Classical music, baseball, roaming red rock mesas in the astonishing countryside, playing music... He considers himself blessed to be one of the people creating new stories about the west, and is proud to call himself a member of the world's oldest profession-storyteller.

Related to Heaven is a Long Way Off

Western Fiction For You

View More

Reviews for Heaven is a Long Way Off

Rating: 3.187500025 out of 5 stars
3/5

8 ratings2 reviews

What did you think?

Tap to rate

Review must be at least 10 words

  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    This is the second book of Win Blevins' 6-part "Rendevous" series about the mountain men, trappers and Indians living across the North American frontier during the 1820s and 1830s, when the whites who ventured west of civilization were adventurers, before the days of homesteading and land rushes brought hoards of whites into Indian lands. Young Sam Morgan, who left his family home in western Pennsylvania and traveled west in the series' first book, So Wild a Dream, has now made his name among his compatriots as a trapper, fighter and survivor. What's more, he has spent time with the Crow Indians and learned their ways, as well. Beauty for Ashes continues Morgan's progress in all these directions, and adds for him a love interest, the Indian girl, Meadowlark.Blevins tells a very good story, and his obviously very deep knowledge of and extensive research into the way of life he is describing here, both Indian and white, informs that telling in satisfying ways. There are times when the story slows to a crawl as we instead get detailed descriptions of processes like beaver hunting and sweat lodges. These are fascinating and well described, although I admit there were times when I was ready for the action to resume. The characterizations are fun, if not very nuanced, other than our man, Sam, who does have some depth to him.All in all, I recommend these books to anyone with an interest in the time and place. Blevins really does do a good job of bringing us there.
  • Rating: 1 out of 5 stars
    1/5
    Part of a mediocre series about the American Mountain men. Definatly have to read previous books to keep up with plots. Historical accurate.