The Life and Adventures of Nat Love


Read by Lee Elliott

(4.4 stars; 27 reviews)

Nat Love was born a slave, emancipated into abject poverty, grew up riding the range as a cowboy and spent his maturity riding the rails as a Pullman Porter. For me, the most amazing thing about him is that despite the circumstances of his life, which included being owned like a farm animal solely because of the color of his skin and spending later decades living and working as an equal with white coworkers, he was an unrepentant racist! Convinced that the only good Indian was a dead one, and that all Mexicans were "greasers" and/or "bums," he rarely passed up a chance to shoot a member of either group, whether in self-defense or cold blood, and shows no sign of having appreciated the difference. At one point, he fell in love with a Mexican girl but, apparently unable to tolerate this reality, considered her "Spanish." Nat Love was a fascinating character who lived in equally interesting times, and one only wishes his autobiography was much longer and more detailed. (Summary by ohsostrange) (4 hr 22 min)

Chapters

Chapter 1 10:05 Read by Lee Elliott
Chapter 2 8:04 Read by Lee Elliott
Chapter 3 9:32 Read by Lee Elliott
Chapter 4 9:59 Read by Lee Elliott
Chapter 5 7:52 Read by Lee Elliott
Chapter 6 12:14 Read by Lee Elliott
Chapter 7 11:52 Read by Lee Elliott
Chapter 8 10:43 Read by Lee Elliott
Chapter 9 13:10 Read by Lee Elliott
Chapter 10 11:39 Read by Lee Elliott
Chapter 11 11:29 Read by Lee Elliott
Chapter 12 10:00 Read by Lee Elliott
Chapter 13 11:02 Read by Lee Elliott
Chapter 14 12:37 Read by Lee Elliott
Chapter 15 16:45 Read by Lee Elliott
Chapter 16 14:06 Read by Lee Elliott
Chapter 17 11:42 Read by Lee Elliott
Chapter 18 12:37 Read by Lee Elliott
Chapter 19 11:03 Read by Lee Elliott
Chapter 20 13:09 Read by Lee Elliott
Chapter 21 15:14 Read by Lee Elliott
Chapter 22 17:51 Read by Lee Elliott

Reviews


(3 stars)

Fair to middle story Very good readers .

Interesting in Parts


(4 stars)

I gave it 4 stars for the historical value of some of the stories, and for the effort taken to write, even though some parts were barely dry. I had no problem with the sound quality, even though I used an equalizer to smooth out the harshness. Lee it is a very expressive reader and I'm thankful, although considering the subject, I would have preferred a voice quality of someone like Louis Armstrong, Ton Loc, or Morgan Freeman.

Like a western movie through audio


(5 stars)

What an insight into the life and thoughts of one of the most famous cowboys in history.

bad audio


(0.5 stars)

ear piercing audio sequel in the recording. could not even get 30 seconds into it.