Wednesday, July 13, 2016 The Nugget Newspaper, Sisters, Oregon 11 Nugget editor launches Kickstarter campaign for book By Craig rullman Correspondent Nugget Newspaper edi- tor Jim Cornelius was born and raised in the suburbs of L.A., but as a child his fam- ily had a cabin in the Angeles National Forest, where he roamed the woods with a pel- let gun and stories of Apache warriors, Daniel Boone, and Davy Crockett informing his imagination. “The first time I ever saw a movie in a theater was when my brother took me to see Jeremiah Johnson,” Jim says, and from those experiences his fascination with the fron- tier, and the men and women who occupied it, was born. The result of that fasci- nation and lifelong study is the book “Warriors of the Wildlands: True Tales of the Frontier Partisans,” 12 fas- cinating biographies of men who lived and operated on the world’s wild and dan- gerous frontiers, stretching from the 1770s to World War I. From Simon Kenton and Blue Jacket on the Ohio fron- tier, to Al Sieber and Pancho Villa on the borderlands, to legends of the African expe- rience such as Deneys Reitz, a Boer commando, the book is an in-depth, gripping, and historically valuable look into the lives of some of those who lived on the edge of civi- lization, and in many ways helped shape the future. A Kickstarter crowd-fund- ing campaign launches July 13, to help get the book into print. To support the campaign visit www.kickstarter.com and search “Jim Cornelius” o r v i s i t w w w. f r o n t i e r partisans.com for a link. “Most of the book’s sub- jects were not profession- als,” Cornelius says. “They were highly skilled guys who applied fieldcraft and hunt- ing skills in warfare from the Canadian prairies to Mexico to Africa. When people think of the frontier they often think of North America, but the phenomenon was similar all around the globe.” Cornelius explains that he chose to refer to his sub- jects as “partisans” because it “evokes small, irregular bands of men fighting in woods, mountains and des- erts. The men I profile were warriors — but not soldiers. Simon Kenton formed his own, unsanctioned Ranger band. Jack Hays’ and Ben McCulloch’s Texas Rangers were volunteers … Al Sieber of Apache Wars fame was a professional scout — but always as a civilian con- tractor. Frederick Russell Burnham may have been ‘the greatest scout America ever I’ve lived with these stories my whole life. I love these guys. even the bad ones. — Jim Cornelius produced,’ but his day job was prospecting.” The politics of the fron- tier were never simple, then or now, and Cornelius says studying and writing about the people involved is “not as simple as good guys vs. bad guys. You can’t separate the heroism, triumph, and trag- edy that is all tangled up in the stories of the frontiers.” Jim’s book is notable for his commitment to write “history that deals with the frontier honestly.” Of those he chose to pro- file, Jim says, “Some of these guys were probably not so lovely as individuals. Pancho Villa is a great example, but what interests me the most is that they came out of a way of life that created resilience and courage and they all have those quali- ties, whether they were good people or bad people.” Cornelius experimented with historical fiction, but “as much as I love good histori- cal fiction, I’ve never felt com- fortable writing it. As soon as I start tweaking the history to photo by lynn WoodWard fit the story, it Jim Cornelius has penned a book of biographies. stops working for me.” Cornelius’ f a s c i n a t i o n w i t h f r o n- the book, which is impor- tier history also led to the tant reading for those who development of his blog, sustain an interest in the les- FrontierPartisans.com, which sons and lives that popu- enjoys international reader- lated the world’s remote ship and a lively conversa- borderlands. Says Jim, “I’ve lived with tion among fans of the fron- tier. With over 600 posts and these stories my whole life. I 4,000 comments, the website love these guys. Even the bad helped lay the foundation for ones.”