Botts is back! After nearly 30 years, the fabulously popular stories of Earthworm Tractor salesman Alexander Botts are back in print to delight both those who remember reading William Hazlett Upson's... This description may be from another edition of this product.
Most of us have so many books and magazines in a teetering pile on our bedside tables, that we can't commit to any one of them. No matter how absorbing the material in hand, the thought of all the other stuff waiting to be read distracts us. However these collections of Botts' stories are the exception. They are so entertaining that I found myself completely concentrated in them. Even though these stories were written from the 1920's through the 1970's, each one seems as fresh as bread out of the oven. They are also educational. As Botts leaps in to accommodate a miner or a timber company owner - you'll incidentally learn a lot about mining, forestry, or how to solve a variety of current workaday problems. But of course the real reason to read these stories is Alexander Botts himself. He's the indomitable salesman, so cocksure and ahead of himself that he often seems to be clutching defeat out of the jaws of victory. But then by sheer luck and pluck, he usually manages to turn things around and make everything come out right. There are quite a few collections of these stories culled from the "Saturday Evening Post," but this book offers the added attraction of pictures of Joe E. Brown in the role of Botts in the one movie that was made featuring this character. So it's a nice edition to own. This book contains 14 of Botts' adventures, including: 1) "I'm a Natural-Born Salesman" - in which Botts launches on his career with the Earthworm Tractor Company and his long-suffering boss, Gilbert Henderson. 2) "The Old Home Town" - in the process of demonstrating a tractor's snow removal ability, the tractor breaks every window along the town's Main Street. 3) "Thar's Gold in Them Thar Mountains" - in which Botts falls in with a scheme to reactivate an old mine that seems to hold a rich vein of ore. 4) "The Depression is Over" - Botts rashly removes some parts from the Earthworm's demo model tractor at Chicago's 1934 World's Fair, while back at the home office he is being considered for a promotion, despite the fact that management perceives that "there is a wild harum-scarum quality to (his) mental processes which at times seems to approach very closely to actual insanity." 5) "Confidential Stuff" - as fears about World War and spy activity in the U.S. mount, Botts devises an elaborate code to be used in telegrams and letters sent back to the home office. A foreseeable failure of communication results and Botts ends up making a high-speed run across the Mexican Border in an Earthworm tractor. 6) "Wrong Again, Henderson" - Botts lets an unauthorized reporter get a look at how Earthworm tractors are helping to build the Alaskan Highway in 1940, despite this construction being a top military secret. 7) "Botts Gets a New Job" - in which Botts goes undercover in his own firm, applying for a job as a janitor in order to prove how silly the new standardized personnel tests are. 8) "Tractor Hoarder" - Botts consults both a soothsayer AND a rainmaker in order
Alexander Botts brought back to life
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 15 years ago
Couldn't wait for each issue of the Saturday Evening Post from Curtis Publishing Company to be distributed and arrive to see if another Alexander Botts adventure would be in it. Now I need wait no longer! Don Hardy
This is fun reading. If your idea of a good book is that it weigh 10 lbs and makes you feel miserable, then this is not the book for you. The stories of Alexander Botts are short, funny, and always have a happy ending, despite the absolutely horrific conditions in the middle of each story. These are stories of hope, that no matter how bad things seem to be, there is always a silver lining for those who don't give up. Alexander claims he's a "Natural Born Salesman"...I'd quibble with that and claim he's a natural born optimist. More than just a "glass half full" attitude, more of a "there are thousands of uses for crushed glass" optimism. Enjoy.
Belly laughts from Saturday Evening Post
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 21 years ago
As a child, living on the Panama Canal Zone, I would look foreward to recieving the Saturday Evening Post , from the states, to read the lastest adventures of Alexander Botts, the bumbeling but Super Salesman from the Earthworm Tractor Company. Our family would gather around the kitchen table each Saturday night as Dad would read this halarious series to us. Great stories! A must for anyone who read Saturday Evening Post in the '20s, onward.
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