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The Floor of Heaven: A True Tale of the Last Frontier and the Yukon Gold Rush
 
 

The Floor of Heaven: A True Tale of the Last Frontier and the Yukon Gold Rush [Hardcover]

Howard Blum
3.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
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Review

“Dramatic and colorful with touches of humor and poignancy, The Floor of Heaven has the spark of a television miniseries and the depth of a novel.  That Blum’s tale of adventure is tall but true makes it all the more enjoyable, particularly because its heartbeat is so keenly American.”
Associated Press

“Highly enjoyable…a narrative history set before, during and just after the [Yukon gold] rush.  Blum traces the lives of three storied men – a prospector, a cowboy turned Pinkerton detective and a notorious conman – whose fates intersected over a stash of gold...It must have been a daunting task wrangling all these conflicting stories into a single, seamless tale, but you never feel that effort on a single page of this unabashedly entertaining book.”
Salon
 
True Grit meets Call of the Wild.  That’s the skinny on Howard Blum’s Floor of Heaven, a big sprawling book that pairs colorful cowboys and ornery thieves with noble Indians and the kinds of hardworking prospectors found in Jack London’s tales of the Yukon…Blum’s characters have undeniable folksy charm and ‘grit’…and it doesn’t take much effort to imagine them in a movie.  The Floor of Heaven has the benchmarks of a bestseller.”
San Francisco Chronicle
 
“There is no doubt that all three of Mr. Blum’s main subjects led fascinating lives…Mr. Blum skillfully intercuts [his story’s] plotlines, building momentum toward his big finish…entertaining.”
Wall Street Journal
 
“Packed with larger-than-life characters straight out of a John Ford western…a rich tale…entertaining.”
American Heritage

“Full of suspense…an amazing real-life adventure story, peopled with characters that any novelist would be proud to have invented: first-rate entertainment.
Michael Korda, New York Times bestselling author of HERO, WITH WINGS LIKE EAGLES and IKE

“In the tradition of great history as great literature…highly recommended…readers will be richly rewarded by Blum’s masterful use of a colorful cast of genuine historical characters set in the majestic northwestern wilderness.”  Library Journal (Starred Review)

"Wildly compelling...a truly memorable frontier tale."
–Kirkus

“A fascinating story…Detailing crimes perpetrated and solved, relationships both happy and tragic, hardships unthinkable in the modern age, and the cold, magical allure of Alaska and the Yukon, Blum captures the spirit and mood of the last of the Old West. The final pages, especially, are filled with drama and a strange yearning…a huge success.”
Publishers Weekly (Starred Review)

"A tense, exciting tale filled with colorful characters.” –Booklist

"Wonderfully original. This narrative about the Alaskan gold rush has everything but Charlie Chaplin. Resurrecting three of the giant figures of the time -- a cowboy detective, a genius con artist and the luckiest bastard in the Yukon -- Blum laces together a grand string of adventures (all the more impressive for being true) that take us deep into the glory hole and the transforming power of greed."
–Pope Brock, New York Times bestselling author of Charlatan

“Brings to life the frenzy of the Yukon Gold Rush that opened Alaska, bringing with it fabulous wealth for a few, the violent lawlessness of the lower Wild West, and a breed of charlatan that fiction could not invent.  From a virtual mother lode of unmined material, Blum casts a narrative that both informs and entertains as he forges the image of the wild days of the last American frontier.”
–William C. Davis, author of the Pulitzer-nominated Battle of Bull Run and also Three Roads to the Alamo and Lone Star Rising
 
“Howard Blum has taken a whole handful of good yarns, and has woven them into a tapestry of  adventure, cattle drives, manhunts, bonanzas, greed, gunslinging, saloon brawls and heists, and of schemers and dreamers who became legends in their time. A novelist could hardly make up such characters, but these were real men. Blum has worked as hard as a sourdough prospector to mine their memoirs, letters and scrapbooks, to trace their interwoven biographies and write a vivid, amazingly plotted narrative that's like spun gold.”
–James Alexander Thom, author of the national bestseller Follow the River and From Sea to Shining Sea
 
"Hold on to your seats! Howard Blum has thrown us a thunderbolt of a tale about three adventurers scrambling to experience the untamed life on the American frontier before it vanishes. The Floor of Heaven is a full-gallop epic of fortune-seeking and betrayal that leaves you pondering the high price we pay for both domesticity and freedom."
–Scott Zesch, author of The Captured
 

"The Floor of Heaven will make a great movie--that goes without saying, since it's by master storyteller Howard Blum. But it's more than that: the best kind of reading experience, where the reader is transported to another time and place and is soon caught up in a glorious adventure.  It's the spellbinding tale of three fascinating characters--a lawman, a con man, and a prospector--set against the background of one of the most alluring eras in American history, the Yukon Gold Rush. This is a great, untold story of daring men involved in a dangerous and exciting enterprise: the taming of a lawless land."
–Jim Donovan, author of Custer and the Little Bighorn
 

Product Description

It is the last decade of the 19th century. The Wild West has been tamed and its fierce, independent and often violent larger-than-life figures – gun-toting wanderers, trappers, prospectors, Indian fighters, cowboys, and lawmen –are now victims of their own success. They are heroes who’ve outlived their usefulness.
But then gold is discovered in Alaska and the adjacent Canadian Klondike and a new frontier suddenly looms - an immense unexplored territory filled with frozen waterways, dark spruce forests, and towering mountains capped by glistening layers of snow and ice.

“Klondicitis,” a giddy mix of greed and lust for adventure, ignites a stampede. Fleeing the depths of a worldwide economic depression and driven by starry-eyed visions of vast wealth, tens of thousands rush northward.

Joining this throng of greenhorns and grifters, whores and highwaymen, sourdoughs and seers are three unforgettable men. In a true-life tale that rivets from the first page, we meet Charlie Siringo, a top-hand sharp-shooting cowboy who, after futilely trying to settle down with his new bride, becomes one of the Pinkerton Detective Agency’s shrewdest; George Carmack, a California-born American Marine who’s adopted by an Indian tribe, raises a family with a Taglish squaw, makes the discovery that starts off the Yukon Gold Rush – and becomes fabulously rich; and Soapy Smith, a sly and inventive predator-conman who rules a vast criminal empire.

As we follow this trio’s lives, we’re led inexorably into a perplexing mystery. A fortune in gold bars has somehow been stolen from the fortress-like Treadwell Mine in Juneau, Alaska, with no clues as to how the thieves made off with such an immensely heavy cargo.  To many it appears that the crime will never be solved.  But the Pinkerton Agency has a reputation for finding the answers that elude others.  Charged with getting the job done is Charlie Siringo who discovers that, to run the thieves to ground, he must embark on a rugged cross-territory odyssey that will lead him across frigid waters and through a frozen wilderness.  Ultimately, he’ll have his quarry in his sights. But then an additional challenge will present itself.  He must face down Soapy Smith and his gang of 300 cutthroats.  Hanging in the balance: George Carmack’s fortune in gold.

At once a compelling true-life mystery and an unforgettable portrait of a time in America’s history when thousands were fired with a vision of riches so unimaginable as to be worth any price, The Floor of Heaven is also an exhilarating tribute to the courage and undaunted spirit of the men and women who helped shape America.
 

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2 Reviews
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3.0 out of 5 stars (2 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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1.0 out of 5 stars Wonderful read, but not a true tale., April 8 2012
This review is from: The Floor of Heaven: A True Tale of the Last Frontier and the Yukon Gold Rush (Hardcover)
I do not think this book truly deserves one star.
I would like give it four stars truth be told, but I can not because it has not.
This is a work of historical fiction, not a "True Tale" as the title states.
While the individual stories of the three main characters is mostly correct,
the interweaving of their lives and the climax are complete fictions.
Read it anyway, you'll like it.
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0 of 1 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Would Make a Great Novel If It Weren't All True!, Oct 4 2011
By 
Nicola Manning (Ontario, Canada) - See all my reviews
(HALL OF FAME)    (TOP 50 REVIEWER)    (REAL NAME)   
This review is from: The Floor of Heaven: A True Tale of the Last Frontier and the Yukon Gold Rush (Hardcover)
Reason for Reading: I've never consciously thought about this before but I do seem to have a penchant for reading about the Klondike/Yukon gold rush. I'm even reading aloud a fiction book to my son on the topic at this moment! This was a must read for me.

This is a true story told in narrative form which really reads like a novel and thus a quick page-turner. The book focuses in on three people: George Carmack, AWOL Marine who "ignites" the biggest gold rush the world has seen; Soapy Smith, conman, bamboozler, thief and murderer who starts off by taking control of Denver's underworld but eventually end's up in Alaska running the lawless boom town of Skagway; and finally, Charlie Siringo, a former cowhand turned Pinkerton detective who is sent to Alaska to solve a crime no other has been able to solve and Pinkerton's name itself is on the line.

The book of course is about the gold rush but it is first and foremost about these three men. The narrative shifts from one to the other telling their stories in detail from early adulthood until they all end up in various parts of Alaska, making each others acquaintance, though never on friendly terms. The book concentrates on the American side of the story, all three men have eventful lives in the States before they head North. Main events are centered in Skagway, Dyea and Juneau. It isn't until quite close to the end of the book that the story crosses over into Canadian land and the actual accumulation of gold in the Bonanza Creek. This book is more about the getting there, the life the prospectors lead, the mindset of these people and specifically the lives of the three main characters.

A truly brilliant, riveting read that would make a great novel if it weren't all true! A fascinating time in history when the lust for gold took over man's sense of reason and turned a barren land into a small collection of roaring last stop boom towns. I have of course previously read all about Skagway and also Soapy Smith as well as a bit about George Carmack but only in the context of the gold rush. Finding out about their backgrounds was fascinating and made for great reading. Charlie Siringo was relatively new to me, I've heard him mentioned briefly, but his fascinating story was fresh. A great read for anyone interested in the harsh, rough and tumble life of the gold rush days, whether you've read much on the topic before or not. The narrative story telling voice is so captivating to read that I am very interested in reading more of Mr. Blum's previous works. He has a very interesting backlist!
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Amazon.com: 4.5 out of 5 stars (69 customer reviews)

28 of 30 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Heroes, Villains, and Dreamers, April 16 2011
By DC_Fan_52 "-Weasel!" - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: The Floor of Heaven: A True Tale of the Last Frontier and the Yukon Gold Rush (Hardcover)
Pre-release customer review from the Amazon Vine™ Program
I've never written a book review before, so excuse me if I'm not on par with the other reviewers. I'm a modern guy and I like TV more than anything, so my measure of a book is how engrossing it is and how much it manages to pry me away from the television. "The Floor of Heaven" is pretty damn good. The back of the book compares it to "a horseless-carriage episode of 24." I've never watched 24, but I can definitely see them squeezing one or two seasons out of this book for television.

What's hard is trying to criticize this book. It's based on a true story. So, I'm looking at how it's presented, and if it's a story worth listening to. The answer to both is, "Yes." First we're introduced to the three main characters a Cowboy, a Conman, and a Dreamer, and they are very interesting individuals. Once I was invested, I couldn't wait for all three to crash into each other in Alaska. There are a handful of really great tales inside, but the main story is the "Great Gold Robbery" in the middle of the book. That part is what peeled me away from the TV for the longest time. It's pretty ingenious how the thieves stole the gold, and tracking down the perpetrators has the detectives tossed around Alaska and in some tights spots.

"Is this book going to turn into Treasure of the Sierra Madre?" I thought it would, but no it doesn't. Greed plays only a tiny part.

I was going to give this book 4-Stars. I thought I'd learn about all the different techniques prospectors used for mining gold or how they survived in the wilderness. There wasn't much new to learn. I'm giving it 5-Stars, because Charlie Siringo is my new hero. He's not Batman, he's just a cowboy/detective with his wits, and he favors caution over resorting to violence. Though he's always willing to draw is big colt if he needs to.

The other two main characters are also real people with their own ambitions and flaws, so they don't drag down the narrative when they have their turn in the spotlight.

So, 5-Stars. Stolen gold and a cowboy hero. Based on a true story from the last American frontier. For adventure fans.

20 of 23 people found the following review helpful
3.0 out of 5 stars Story was good, atmosphere not so much., April 8 2011
By Schuyler T. Wallace "Writer, traveler, retire... - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: The Floor of Heaven: A True Tale of the Last Frontier and the Yukon Gold Rush (Hardcover)
Pre-release customer review from the Amazon Vine™ Program
Howard Blum is candid about his intent with the writing of The Floor of Heaven. In his note on sources he says he wanted to write a true story about the early days of the old west and of the far north. "True" is a key word here because stories of that period are notoriously embellished by participants and observers. Finding the truth in the accounts of the time is a treacherous journey. Blum knows this and realized from the outset that he would have to proceed cautiously. I believe he has assembled his material, carefully vetted it, and written his story as he intended it to be. It is fine investigative reporting.

The Floor of Heaven is subtitled as a true tale of the American West and the Yukon gold rush. It's an intriguing story of three men very different in mind-set and integrity who eventually are drawn together by their individual aspirations. It's a story of a hard-working miner who strikes it big and needs the protection of a dedicated detective from a ruthless robber and con-man. Blum puts it all together in a masterful, exciting book.

I got a true sense of the time frame. Even the font at the beginning of each chapter made me think "old west." The individuals were carefully crafted as genuine pioneer characters and the dialogue was authentic and believable. The events were familiar milestones in American history. It all came off believable, but I had a problem with the overall feel of the book.

The author didn't draw me into the grit and turmoil of the old west and early Alaska. When I read Jack London my hands and feet become icy, I feel cold snow on my neck, and I smell a wood fire and frying bacon. I see spreads of impenetrable forest, heavy snow, and frigid mountain peaks. I hear the tumble of wild water mingled with the sounds of wild animals and rowdy adventurers. My muscles ache from fatigue. I never got that with Howard Blum's story. It seems to me that his protagonists operated in a bland environment and didn't suffer or work hard enough to deserve their goals. There's no sense of hardship in their endeavors.

It could be argued that narrative history shouldn't include feeling or atmosphere. That's true about newspaper writing. But I'm the reader here and I want to be of part of the story. I want to experience it. My favorite narrative historical accounts included my participation. I was there. I suffered. I shared in the losses and the rewards. I read Mr. Blum's book with interest and admiration for his research, but I didn't get to go to the places and live with the characters he wrote about.

7 of 7 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Like reading Deadwood in print!, Mar 8 2011
By Wulfstan "wulfstan" - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: The Floor of Heaven: A True Tale of the Last Frontier and the Yukon Gold Rush (Hardcover)
Pre-release customer review from the Amazon Vine™ Program
I really enjoyed the Deadwood television series, and the Klondike and Deadwood have a lot in common. I also interested in Alaskan history as my Dad grew up in Alaska, so this book sounded interesting from the get-go. And- it certainly turned out that way!

Howard Blum, the author of "American Lightning: Terror, Mystery, the Birth of Hollywood, and the Crime of the Century", "The Brigade: An Epic Story of Vengeance, Salvation, and WWII" and others has decided to tell the story of the Klondike gold rush by focusing on three "real characters" of the "Old North".

Charlie Siringo is a old-school cowboy turned Pinkerton Detective. George Carmack is a deserter from the Marines who "went native". And Soapy Smith is a con man (fans of Deadwood will recognize Soapy as the guy who sells "Soap with a prize inside!") .

The author deftly entwines the three stories, showing how each man had his part in the Gold Rush. For example George was the first who panned the Bonanza gold, and made the first claim on that river of gold. Soapy Smith gets into and out of trouble, but then hits the "Big Time" running the boom town of Skagway.

Hard hitting, well researched, and full of action, this book would make another great Cable series, like Deadwood. Hollywood, are you listening?

One small quibble- in order to get us the full background on his three protagonists, the novel doesn't get to the discovery of Gold in the Yukon until we're more than 2/3rd through. However, don't worry, there's plenty of stuff to keep you turning those pages until then!
 Go to Amazon.com to see all 69 reviews  4.5 out of 5 stars 
 
 
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