Neha Patil (Editor)

Savage Sam (novel)

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Publisher
  
Harper & Row

Media type
  
Print

Preceded by
  
Old Yeller

Author
  
Fred Gipson

Adaptations
  
Savage Sam (1963)

Country
  
United States of America


Language
  
English

Publication date
  
1962

OCLC
  
732819039

Originally published
  
1962

Genre
  
Children's literature

Illustrator
  
Carl Burger

Savage Sam (novel) t0gstaticcomimagesqtbnANd9GcTcfcacddrNRKsPv

Similar
  
Fred Gipson books, Children's literature

Savage Sam is a 1962 children's novel written by Fred Gipson, his second book concerning the Coates family of frontier Texas in the late 1860s. It is a sequel to 1956's Old Yeller. It was inspired by the story of former Apache captive Herman Lehmann, whom Gipson had seen give an exhibition when he was a child. It was adapted into a motion picture of the same name.

Contents

Plot

Savage Sam is Old Yeller's son. He is a Bluetick Coonhound, and every bit as courageous and loyal as his father, as well as an incredibly keen tracker. Sam mostly likes chasing bobcats, sometimes with Arliss.

Travis and Arliss Coates and Lisbeth Searcy are taken captive by Apache and Comanche Indians. Jim Coates, the boys' father, gathers up some neighboring men to go in search of them, which includes Lisbeth's somewhat overbearing grandfather, Bud Searcy. Travis manages to escape and is found by the search party (partly thanks to Sam's keen sense of smell), and they rescue Arliss and Lisbeth days later.

Novel Series

A follow-up novella, Little Arliss was discovered in Fred Gipson's papers by his son, and published in 1978.

References

Savage Sam (novel) Wikipedia