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If the template has a separate documentation page (usually called "Template:template name/doc"), add [[Category:WikiProject American Old West templates]] to the <includeonly> section at the bottom of that page. Otherwise, add <noinclude>[[Category:WikiProject American Old West templates]]</noinclude>
The American frontier, also known as the Old West, and popularly known as the Wild West, encompasses the geography, history, folklore, and culture associated with the forward wave of American expansion in mainland North America that began with European colonial settlements in the early 17th century and ended with the admission of the last few ...
Western fiction is a genre of literature set in the American Old West frontier and typically set from the late eighteenth to the late nineteenth century. [1] Well-known writers of Western fiction include Zane Grey from the early 20th century and Louis L'Amour from the mid-20th century.
Create the template like this: {{FadedPage|id=Burroughs, Edgar Rice|name=Edgar Rice Burroughs|author=yes}} The id is the string used to construct the url The name is the author's name The author must be "author=yes" to denote an author type link rather than a book type link. Step 2B: To link to a book: Create the template like this:
This template's initial visibility currently defaults to autocollapse, meaning that if there is another collapsible item on the page (a navbox, sidebar, or table with the collapsible attribute), it is hidden apart from its title bar; if not, it is fully visible. To change this template's initial visibility, the |state= parameter may be used:
Optional parameters, meaning is specified by the table header (e.g. language, translator, country, series, illustrator, pages, oclc) Text describing optional cells isbn: ISBN "ISBN" isbn_note: Any notes about the given ISBN (e.g. hardcover) — short_summary: If possible, keep summaries under three or four sentences — line_color
This category is for articles on history books about the American Old West (i.e. books that focus on the western United States in the second half of the nineteenth century). Subcategories This category has only the following subcategory.
A dime Western is a modern term for Western-themed dime novels, which spanned the era of the 1860s–1900s.Most would hardly be recognizable as a modern western, having more in common with James Fennimore Cooper's Leatherstocking saga, but many of the standard elements originated here: a cool detached hero, a frontiersman (later a cowboy), a fragile heroine in danger of the despicable outlaw ...