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Laughing Bill Hyde and Other Stories

Rex Beach

Book Overview: 

Bill Hyde is nicknamed "Laughing Bill" because he laughs constantly whenever he's in danger. His enemies assume that Bill's laughter is proof of his courage, but in fact his habit is a nervous reaction to mortal terror.

Bill Hyde has spent most of his adult life in prison, mostly for his habit of "borrowing" things without asking the owners' permission. Breaking out of prison in Montana, he heads west and stows away aboard a freighter bound for the Alaska goldfields. In Alaska, Bill meets Ponotah, a Red Indian maiden who has been cheated out of her gold stake by Black Jack Burg and his henchmen. Bill Hyde "salts" a worthless gold mine, using a few gold nuggets to make the worthless mine appear valuable. Then he tricks Black Jack into trading Ponotah's mine for the salted mine. She gets her mine back, and Bill Hyde gets Ponotah.

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Book Excerpt: 
. . .I think the Imnachuck is over there," said he.

Harkness hesitated, then he nodded: "Right-o! It's just over that low saddle." He indicated a sweeping hillside ahead, and a half-mile further on he left the creek and began to climb. This was heavy work for the dogs, and mid-afternoon came before the partners had gained the summit only to discover that they were not upon a saddleback after all, but upon the edge of a vast rolling tableland from which a fanlike system of creeks radiated. In all directions was a desolate waste of barren peaks.

Folsom saw that the sky ahead was thick and dark, as if a storm impended, and realizing only too well the results of the slightest error in judgment he called to Harkness. But the latter pretended not to hear, and took advantage of the dogs' fatigue to hurry out of earshot. It was some time before the team overhauled him.

"Do you know where you are?" Folsom inquired.

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