Well, my Western-loving brother came through again this year.  But the gifts are a bit more on the adult side!  

I got a copy of "Cactus and Pine," a book of poetry by Sharlot Hall, a turn of the century Arizona ranch woman who celebrated the West in poetry both folksy and grandiose, kind of a literary foremother of Annie Proulx.  
http://www.cowboypoetry.com/sharlothall.htmHere's one of her poems:
Old Cow Men's Parade    The flags are flying, the bands are playing,
       And there, down Gurley street
    The big parade is coming—
       Hark to the trampling feet!
    Two hundred cow men riding,
       Dressed out for holiday;
    Ten-gallon hats and fancy shirts
       And 'kerchiefs bright and gay.
    Two hundred horses prancing
       As the riders whoop and yell;
    And jingle of spurs and bridle chains
       The noise and music swell.
    There's Ruffner on the sorrel,
       His silver bridle shines;
    And Doc Pardee comes riding
       Down from the Munds Park pines.
    And there's the Beloat of Buckeye
       Who twirls a winning rope;
    Loge Morris and his juniors,
       All on a swinging lope.
    The Champies and Ed Bowman,
       And all the medalled train
    Come back to lift more honors
       At Prescott once again.
    They pass with jokes and laughter,
       And shouting clear and loud,
    Out to the big arena
       To face the cheering crowd.
    And some will rope for glory
       And some will ride for gold;
    And some will grappled bull-dogged steers
       And win on a strangle-hold.
    Down sweep the big sombreros
       As the bow to the grandstand's cheer;
    But, look, as they ride to their places—
       God! Look what's coming here!
    A long, long train of horsemen,
       Yet never a hoof-beat sounds;
    And never a dust-spurt rises
       From the trampled sporting grounds.
    A-breast, in martial order
       They wheel and swing to place;
    But their forms are thin and misty
       And a shadow dims each face;
    A pale and still battalion
       In Stetsons, chaps, and spurs;
    And they, too, bow to the grandstand—
       But the picture swims and blurs.
    Here are the men of Texas
       Who made the Chisholm Trail,
    Pointing their herds of long-horns
       To the track of a steel-shod rail,
    Heading their leaders northward
       By a puff of engine smoke;
    Betting their all on a market chance—
       Thousands--or down, and broke.
    Men who trailed the Long Trail
       With steers for Idaho;
    Men who drove their beef herds
       To feed Geronimo.
    Men who could buck a Norther,
       Men who could fight a drouth;
    Sitting their lean trail-horses,
       Keen-eyed, and grim of mouth.
    There's Jim O'Neal from Date Creek
       With his riders, dark and trim;
    And close at this knee Juan Leyvas,
       A stripling lithe and slim.
    And Stuart Knight comes riding
       With his smile and careless grace—
    But a whirlwind whips down the beaten track
       And a dust-cloud blurs each face.
    Gone are the silent riders,
       And only the sun beats down
    On the trampled, barren arena
       And the chute gates weathered brown:
    They've ridden back to the Days That Were;
       But before a play is made—
    Three cheers for the unseen men who passed
       In the old cow men's parade.   
 From Poems of a Ranch Woman, 1953Another gift was a magnetic picture frame mounted in stone from Ardosia Stonecraft.  Looks like it would make a good bookend, too.

Finally, I was happy to get a CD of the Bar-J Wranglers, some singing cowboys we saw years ago at a chuckwagon supper in the Tetons.
http://www.barjchuckwagon.com/BarJRecordings.htmlI'll get some more stuff when I meet friends for dinner later.  What did y'all get?  
