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impreader 's review for:
Sackett's Land
by Louis L'Amour
Fair, and worth a brief wander in L'Amour's raconteuring. It can be a bit thick in the first-person narration, but the historical detail, details deepened and personalized by the characters, give it a kick. The narrator, and others -- quirky, both dull and sharp, grow out of mere type and take on flesh, bone, and give the small volume girth enough to escape the slimness and myopia of a single time.