L'il Darlin': Peril, Loss and Love in the Convict Lake Backcountry of the High Sierras
By (Author) Sandy Stacey
BookBaby
BookBaby
27th July 2020
United States
Paperback
294
Width 152mm, Height 228mm, Spine 20mm
453g
same a short description - Sandy Stacey, AKA L'il Darlin', flees from a vicious attacker to Convict Lake in the Eastern High Sierras, where she is lost and alone, frightened and desperate, not knowing which way to turn. As if through divine intervention, she meets three rough, tough cowboys, backgrounds unknown. When her attacker follows her from her home in Los Angeles to Convict Lake, she turns to the cowboys for help, but who are they
She has been raised in an exclusive private school for girls in Los Angeles, secluded with her classmates in a cocoon of a 19th century world behind the tall grey walls of a mansion, being steeped in education, etiquette and social graces. The outside world does not exist for her and the father she longs for also does not seem to exist.
In the Eastern High Sierras, to the cowboys trail dust's thicker than blood; kin is anyone who needs help and L'il Darlin' needs help. She becomes a sister to two of the cowboys and the leader hopes she will become a companion, a comrade he has longed for and never found. Their relationships grow as they live together in the backcountry mountains above Convict Lake, standing strong through violence and struggle, four trusty friends in this earthly life and the one beyond.
Sandy Stacey was born in Newark, New Jersey and now lives in Santa Monica, California. She came to California at the age of three in 1937 and spent her formative years in an exclusive private girls school in Los Angeles. After graduating at 16, she was hired as a singer by Edwin Lester of the Los Angeles Civic Light Opera Association, touring and performing in the Song of Norway, starring Jean Fenn, John Tyler and Robert Rounsfeld. She married at 18 and had three children while continuing to sing in theatre and opera productions, including Rigoletto, Marriage of Figaro Madam Butterfly, and La Traviata. Sandy sang in over 40 Broadway shows at the renowned Melodyland theaters. After a series of unexpected events, Sandy moved to the Convict Lake backcountry of the eastern High Sierras in 1970. There Sandy met three rough but caring cowboys who took her under their wing. She remained with them on the trail for more than a decade before returning to normal life. The trail life was and will always be Sandy's dream.