The Rainbow Trail (Unabridged)
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- $9.99
Descripción editorial
At the end of Zane Grey's most famous book,
Riders of the Purple Sage, the two main characters are left trapped in "Surprise Valley". This story takes place 10 years later, when the wall to Surprise Valley is finally broken. Further exciting adventure then await Jane and Lassiter, as well as many new characters.
Reseñas de clientes
zane you are wrong!
IT'S OBVIOUS THAT ZANE GREY DID NOT DO HIS HOMEWORK ON MORMONS!!!!! He misrepresents them as being resentful to outsiders, power-hungry,& exercising unrighteous dominion over women. Right in the Mormon's own scriptures (written and practiced PRIOR to their settling in Utah) they were told they should welcome non-Mormons into their congregations if those people wanted to know the truth (Doctrine & Covenants 46:5). The Mormon's "12 Articles of Faith" (loving their neighbor--including Indians--as their selves, being Christ-like, doing good to others, being benevolent, virtuous, and in doing good to ALL men) dispels every negative characterization created by Zane Grey! There are also countless women's diaries from early Utah pioneer women that dispel the fact that they were dominated by men. Their own scriptures indicate possible disfellowship/excommunication for abuse of children and women. Any unrighteous dominion was and still is a serious offense in Mormon religion. Zane Grey wrote three anti-Mormon books (Riders of Purple Sage, Rainbow Trail, & Desert Crucible) and so begs the question: did Zane Grey have an anti-Mormon agenda ? Are we to now assume that he did not do his homework on ANY of his OTHER books? How am I to now trust the homework on ANY of his other books? Zane Grey has lost all credibility with me, and even though he is a good writer, I cannot read any of his other books, because I will now always wonder what other machinations he threw into the mix!