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Start giftingAnnie Oakley
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Learn moreAnnie Oakley was without a doubt the greatest markswoman who ever lived. Born in 1860 in Darke County, Ohio, she built herself from obscure and impoverished beginnings into the best known woman of her time.
Courtney Ryley Cooper's classic biography traces Oakley's extraordinary journey and separates the facts from the many legends that have sprung up in its wake. We learn of her enduring marriage to Frank Butler and their first meeting, a shooting match in which the seemingly delicate young girl defeated the professional marksman; her association with Buffalo Bill Cody's Wild West Show and its triumphal tour through Europe and America; the train crash that nearly took her life; and her years as an actress and teacher. Her story remains to this day one of the grandest to have come out of the Old West.
Courtney Riley Cooper (1886-1940) was born in Kansas City, Missouri. At age sixteen, he left home to join the circus, eventually working as a press agent for Wild West showman Buffalo Bill Cody. Prior to serving in World War I, Cooper also worked as a news reporter. Following the war, he wrote sevaral novels, short stories, radio serials, and film scenarios, and he served as the principal ghostwriter for FBI director J. Edgar Hoover. Among his publications are The Cross-Cut, The Pioneers, and The Golden Bubble.
Jonathan Reese was trained from an early age in music and theater. Of his many credits he was proudest of being a founding member of Berkeley's Straw Hat review. Formidably intelligent, deeply sympathetic, and highly sensitive to his material, he was perfectly suited for literary narration. His many audiobooks include The Executioner's Song by Norman Mailer, Just as I Am by Billy Graham, Travels in Alaska by John Muir, and Without a Hero by T. Coraghessan Boyle. A native Californian, Reese died in San Francisco in 1999.