The last, and in my opinion, best story by Louis L'AMour- I've read it a couple of times- I just happened to recall it
The Last Of The Breed
en.wikipedia.org
Last of the Breed, a 1987 book by
Louis L'Amour, tells the fictional story of Native American
United States Air Force pilot Major Joseph Makatozi (Joe Mack), shot down by the Soviets over the ocean between Russia and Alaska and then captured. Although the exact time is never stated, it appears to be the mid- to late 1980s, as
Mikhail Gorbachev's rise to power is mentioned. It was L'Amour's second-to-last published novel.
The start of the book chronicles Joe "Mack" Makatozi's daring escape from captivity and introduces another captive, an English chemist whom the Soviets believe is working on chemical warfare agents. The chemist is mentioned later, as the first mistake of their captor Zamatev, because it turned out he was only working on developing insect repellents.
The success of Mack's subsequent foot travel, across
Siberia to the
Bering Strait, is dependent on his
Native American hunting, tracking, and evasion skills. It is mentioned several times in the text that these skills had been taught by his people to each generation, over thousands of years. Now, the skilled aviator must remember and practice the archery, fire-making, tracking, stalking, hunting, skinning, and ambush skills taught by his elders. Knowing that "a man with a knife can survive", he sneaks into a miner's cabin, and leaving no evidence he was there, steals preserved food, a heavy sweater, and a knife. Although this knife is needed for Mack to survive in the wilderness, his theft of the knife gives the
Yakut tracking him a clue as to where to begin searching for Mack.
Mack also has strong attachments to his people's discipline and self-mastery. When he comes upon an army patrol he crawls inside an old
hollow tree to hide. His pursuers make camp in the same area, and he must remain motionless until it gets dark, and only the sentries are awake. When captured, he is roughly beaten by his pursuers, but true to his heritage, he never makes a sound. A man who previously informed on him unlocks the shed he is in and allows Mack to escape. Mack ends up killing Alekhin the Yakut, who was following him, and sending his scalp back to Colonel Arkady Zamatev with a note written on birchbark that reads: "This was once a custom of my people. In my lifetime I shall take two. This is the first."
At the end of the book, the success of Mack's 90-mile
kayak ride to Alaska is left unresolved. The resolution of the story is left to the reader's imagination.
I opened the link to his web page and this is what came up
ne day I was speeding along at the typewriter, and my daughter - who was a child at the time - asked me, "Daddy, why are you writing so fast?" And I replied, "Because I want to see how the story turns out!"
. . . Louis L'Amour

