by J. Frank Dobie
illustrated by Charles Shaw
introduction by Frank H. Wardlaw
University of Texas Press, 1978
Cloth: 978-0-292-71050-4 | eISBN: 978-0-292-78940-1 | Paper: 978-0-292-71052-8
Library of Congress Classification F786.D633 1978
Dewey Decimal Classification 979

ABOUT THIS BOOK | REVIEWS | TOC
ABOUT THIS BOOK

Written in 1930, Coronado's Children was one of J. Frank Dobie's first books, and the one that helped gain him national prominence as a folklorist. In it, he recounts the tales and legends of those hardy souls who searched for buried treasure in the Southwest following in the footsteps of that earlier gold seeker, the Spaniard Coronado.


"These people," Dobie writes in his introduction, "no matter what language they speak, are truly Coronado's inheritors.... l have called them Coronado's children. They follow Spanish trails, buffalo trails, cow trails, they dig where there are no trails; but oftener than they dig or prospect they just sit and tell stories of lost mines, of buried bullion by the jack load... "


This is the tale-spinning Dobie at his best, dealing with subjects as irresistible as ghost stories and haunted houses.


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