Westward, Tally Ho! Audiobook By Milo James Fowler cover art

Westward, Tally Ho!

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Westward, Tally Ho!

By: Milo James Fowler
Narrated by: David Bufton
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How are your survival skills?

It's the late 19th century, and you're a young English aristocrat lost in the American Southwest. A lynch mob is after you for horse theft. Irritable natives are on your trail. And the woman with you is not the type you'd bring home to your mother. Would you survive long enough to find safety? Or would you curl into a fetal position and cry?

This is where Clarence Oliver Edwards finds himself in Westward, Tally Ho! Bored with his privileged life in England and weary of the relatives who share his family estate, Clarence follows his recently dismissed butler, Guthrie, on a non-stop adventure from the busy streets of Boston to the dusty trails of Santa Fe. What begins as Guthrie's search for his long-lost daughter becomes a shocking introduction to the American West for Clarence. His idea of proper etiquette is stretched to the limit as he's bombarded with characters of all types: tough gunslingers, seductive saloon girls, crafty frontier traders, an eccentric Zuni Indian chief, and a wild hermit.

Through it all, Clarence realizes the value of loyalty and the cost of redemption. But most importantly, he discovers a degree of inner strength he never knew he possessed. Will Guthrie find his daughter? Will Clarence survive unscathed? Take a wild ride through the Old West and find out!

©2016 Milo James Fowler (P)2017 Milo James Fowler
Old West Action & Adventure Witty Wild West Westerns Funny Fiction Survival Genre Fiction
Fun Adventure • British Humor • Distinct Character Voices • Entertaining Story • Vivid Descriptions • Unique Storyline

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Story line good, did Not like how the Native American were represented. The worst part was the narrator would simply Stop at the end of each chapter and then there was dead silence. I would check to see if device was not working, then finally the narrator came back stating Chapter ___ and go on. This was very disruptive to listening to the story. The storyline was basically good and the story silly but sort of fun.

Poor narrative set-up

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Looking for adventure, young Englishman Clarence Oliver Edwards joins up with his ex-butler who is headed off to America – the late 1800’s America, complete with Native American Indians on the warpath and the railroad still a work in progress and west untamed.  Finding himself in trouble being chased by a lynch mob, Indians, gunslingers and many more, Clarence finds his true self and inner strength.

A delightful audiobook that has some tense moments and moments of hilarity!  One first sees Clarence as a whining spoiled English wealthy brat whom his former employee, Guthrie tolerates on his mission to find his missing daughter.  By the end of the novel, one does witness Clarence’s growth into adulthood.

The characters were vivid and rich, the dialog realistic that made the story advance.  The characters were off a bit – the Indians, the train conductor, saloon gals just don’t fit the usual mode.  Actually, all the characters were a bit “off” in a thought-provoking way that made one look at stereotypes.   If one is looking for a Zane Grey or Clint Eastwood or John Wayne type Western – this is not it!  This is a fantastic, oftentimes absurdly funny western genre experience written by Milo James Fowler.  Fowler is vivid and rich in his descriptions painting a clear picture. Fowler has provided an entertaining story of action and adventure.

The narrator, David Blufton, performed the novel expertly.  He had a firm grip on all the characters and performed them very well.  This was a great pairing of a narrator to a novel!

I found it fun.  I listened to this audiobook laughing out loud frequently.  A great audiobook for solid fun entertainment!

There were no issues with the production or audio of this book.

Western Fun!

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Listener received this title free

A fun story about an English lad and his butler on a mission in the American West. It's part camp, part campfire, and humor and action with stereotypes galore.

Performance-wise, the narrator does a decent job with creating distinct and recognizable voices. He sometimes slurs his voices into other voices, making recognition of who's speaking difficult at times.

In the middle of the book there's random crackling, popping noises, and the narrator/editor sometimes leaves quite long gaps at the end of each chapter.

Small gripes aside, this is a fun adventure that could actually stand to be turned into a series.

Western Camp!

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Listener received this title free

This is a fun read/listen featuring an immature, spoiler, high-crust English lad, and his stalwart "butler," making their way for a new life in the wild west. We have a crazy Indian chief, some no-good side-winder bad guys, a beautiful damsel in distress, and all the hi-jinx you can imagine with that combo. When I rate the "Performance" it is NOT a reflection on the narrator, instead the audio mixing sound quality. No too distracting but it didn't help the pace of the story. The Ending? Sorry no spoilers here!

An Englishman in the Wild West

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I got this book via audiobook boom and this is my voluntary review. This book was interesting and satirical. Just when I thought I was getting into a good story the satire came out. I loved that the main characters were of different stations in life but of similar dispositions. Even though the butler was not the main character he took the show for me. I loved that he not only found his daughter but his daughter and the real main character fell in love. Some of the scenes were very disturbing but I loved the last train ride and the way they were able to catch the train. That was a good scene and helped keep the 3-star rating I gave the book. Some of the scenes were too far-fetched for me. The narrator fit the story but left me hanging at times. When the scene of the main character and the lady riding into the desert and then falling off of the horse was described I was wide-eyed.with something, disbelief, what you actually wrote that or something.

What?

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