Publisher's Synopsis
Excerpt from The Boy Hunters of the Mississippi
In 1846, after Mayne Reid had made the acquaintance of Edgar Allan Poe in Philadelphia, he went off as volum teer to the Mexican war, fought bravely at Santa Cruz, Cerro Gordo, and Contreras, and was reported dead after the taking of Chapultepec, in September 1847. A dirge to his memory was actually recited at a banquet in Ohio.
His first novel, The Ri?e Rangers, was written in America, and once he had found his measure as a tale-writer, he used his invention without stint. For a time he was almost as popular as Jules Verne. His enterprise led him into other schemes, including a daily London paper, The Little Times, which only ran for three or four days. But his courage was unabated to the end, whether he was fighting with his sword in open war, or with his pen in the cause of Kossuth or Edgar Poe.
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