The Authentic Life of Billy, the Kid

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The Authentic Life of Billy, the Kid
The Authentic Life of Billy, the Kid Title Page.jpg
1882 book cover
Authors
Original titleThe Authentic Life of Billy, the Kid, The Noted Desperado of the Southwest
LanguageEnglish
Genre biography  · history
Published
Versions:
    • 1882 (Santa Fé, New Mexico Printing and Publishing Company)
    • 1927 (New York, The Macmillan Company)
    • 1946 (New York, Atomic Books, Inc.)
    • 1953 (Houston, The Frontier Press of Texas)
    • 1954 (The Western Frontier Library, Norman, University of Oklahoma Press)
    • 1994 (New York, Indian Head Books)

The Authentic Life of Billy, the Kid, The Noted Desperado of the Southwest is a biography and partly first-hand account written by Pat Garrett, sheriff of Lincoln County, New Mexico, in collaboration with a ghostwriter, Marshall Ashmun "Ash" Upson. During the summer of 1881 in a small New Mexican village, Garrett shot and killed the notorious outlaw, William H. Bonney, better known as Billy the Kid. Due to the first publisher's inability to widely distribute this book beginning in 1882, [1] it sold relatively few copies during Garrett's lifetime. [2] By the time the fifth publisher purchased the copyright in 1954, this book had become a major reference for historians who have studied the Kid's brief life. The promotion and distribution of the fifth version of this book to libraries in the United States and Europe sent it into a sixth printing in 1965, and by 1976 it had reached its tenth printing. [3] For a generation after Sheriff Garrett shot the Kid, his account was considered to be factual, [4] but historians have since found in this book many embellishments and inconsistencies with other accounts of the life of Billy the Kid.

Contents

Purpose

In the weeks that followed the death of Billy the Kid, several articles written mostly in New Mexican newspapers and dime novels depicted the Kid's death in ways that put Pat Garrett in a bad light. As the author wrote in his introduction to this biography, "I am incited to this labor, in a measure, by an impulse to correct the thousand false statements which have appeared in the public newspapers and in yellow-covered, cheap novels." [5] Garrett's purpose comes in two parts; firstly, he wanted to publicly respond to the speculative accusations against him about Billy the Kid's death that were being printed, and secondly, he wanted to set the record straight regarding the more notable incidents that had involved the notorious outlaw beginning with his early life and leading up to his untimely death. Many people had begun to gossip about the unfairness of Garrett's final encounter with the Kid, so his first reason, which was to clear his name, was decidedly his main purpose. [6]

Still smarting from local outrage in New Mexico over his shooting of the Kid, [7] Garrett wanted to present his side of the story and hoped to turn a profit, as well, on the American public's fascination with the outlaw. Consequently, he published his account of Bonney's life and death in 1882. [8] It was credited to Garrett, but the first 15 chapters were a concoction of factual material mixed with fabrications, written by Roswell's postmaster, Ash Upson, an itinerant journalist. [9] [10] The remaining chapters, written in a more restrained style, are generally accurate, and were likely composed by Garrett himself. [11]

The book failed to find a wide audience, so sold just a few copies; nevertheless, although filled with many errors of fact, The Authentic Life served afterwards as the main source for most books written about the Kid until the 1960s. [8] [12] [13] Thus was established the mythic stature of Pat Garrett as the heroic lawman in pursuit of the villainous but romantic desperado, Billy the Kid. [14]

Ghostwriter

Pat Garrett Pat Garrett2.jpg
Pat Garrett
Ash Upson AshUpsondigital.jpg
Ash Upson

Garrett, who did not consider himself a writer, called upon his friend, Marshall Ashmun "Ash" Upson, to ghostwrite this book with him. [2] Ash Upson was an itinerant journalist who had a gift for graphic prose. Upson and Garrett shared equally in the royalties. [15] As was noted in the introduction to the fifth version of this book:

Garrett and Upson became very close friends, and this friendship endured until Upson's death at Uvalde, Texas, in 1894. He was buried there in a cemetery lot owned by Pat Garrett. Garrett and Upson friends and a writing team that produced a remarkable book. [16]

Pat Garrett and his Book, by J. C. Dykes

Good reason exists to believe that the legend of Billy the Kid, including the familiar historical figure he has become, would not be known at all today if this book had not been published. [17]

Versions

The only authenticated photograph of Billy the Kid Billy the Kid corrected.jpg
The only authenticated photograph of Billy the Kid

Six versions report Garrett's first-hand account. Brief descriptions of these are: [16]

Also, many smaller publishers offer facsimiles of these versions.

See also

Notes

  1. LeMay, John and Stahl, Robert J. (2020). The Man Who Invented Billy the Kid: The Authentic Life of Ash Upson. Roswell, NM: Bicep Books. pp. 127–133. ISBN   978-1-953221-91-9.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  2. 1 2 Utley (1989), pgs. 198-9.
  3. Tuska (1983), p. 114.
  4. Tuska (1983), p. 125.
  5. Quotation from the introductory to The Authentic Life of Billy, the Kid by Pat Garrett.
  6. Tuska (1983), p. 192.
  7. Johnny D. Boggs (20 September 2013). Billy the Kid on Film, 1911-2012. McFarland. p. 12. ISBN   978-1-4766-0335-3.
  8. 1 2 Frederick Nolan (20 October 2014). The Billy the Kid Reader. University of Oklahoma Press. p. 358. ISBN   978-0-8061-8254-4.
  9. William A. Keleher (March 2008). The Fabulous Frontier, 1846-1912. Sunstone Press. p. 144. ISBN   978-0-86534-620-8.
  10. Robert Marshall Utley (2000). Billy the Kid: A Short and Violent Life. Tauris Parke Paperbacks. p. 210. ISBN   978-1-86064-601-0.
  11. Frank Richard Prassel (1 September 1996). The Great American Outlaw: A Legacy of Fact and Fiction. University of Oklahoma Press. p. 153. ISBN   978-0-8061-2842-9.
  12. Stephen Tatum (1 January 1982). Inventing Billy the Kid: Visions of the Outlaw in America, 1881-1981 . University of New Mexico Press. pp.  123–124. ISBN   978-0-8263-0610-4.
  13. Jon Tuska (30 May 1994). Billy the Kid, his life and legend. Greenwood Press. p. 237. ISBN   9780313285899.
  14. Jon Tuska (30 May 1994). Billy the Kid, his life and legend. Greenwood Press. p. 114. ISBN   9780313285899.
  15. Tuska (1983), p. 37.
  16. 1 2 Excerpts from the introduction to The Authentic Life of Billy, the Kid by J. C. Dykes
  17. Tuska (1983), p. xv.

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References

Further reading