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1001 Classic Short Stories & Tales

THE RIDING OF FELIPE by FRANK NORRIS

1001 Classic Short Stories & Tales

Jon Hagadorn

Fiction, Arts

4.51.2K Ratings

🗓️ 24 May 2026

⏱️ 46 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

🎙️ SHOW NOTES

Frank Norris — "The Riding of Felipe" 1001 Classic Short Stories & Tales

Set in the days of early California, when ranchos stretched across the valleys and horsemanship was a measure of pride and manhood, Frank Norris's "The Riding of Felipe" tells the story of a young Californio boy facing a test that will determine his standing in the eyes of his family and community. The tale blends local color, cultural tradition, and the kind of personal challenge that reveals character under pressure.

Norris paints the landscape with vivid detail — the dust, the sunlight, the spirited horses, and the proud traditions of the Californio ranch families. At its heart, this is a story about courage, expectation, and the moment a boy steps across the threshold into something larger than himself. It's a compact but powerful sketch of a world already fading by the time Norris wrote it.

🖋️ About Frank Norris

Frank Norris (1870–1902) was one of America's most important early naturalist writers — a forerunner to Jack London and Theodore Dreiser. Though best known for his novels McTeague, The Octopus, and The Pit, Norris also wrote short fiction that explored the American West, frontier cultures, and the tensions between old ways and the modern world.

Norris spent time in California as a young man, and the region left a deep impression on him. He was fascinated by the state's layered history — Spanish, Mexican, and American — and by the dramatic changes taking place as railroads, industry, and new settlers transformed the landscape. "The Riding of Felipe" comes from this period of his writing, when he was producing short stories that captured the color, grit, and human drama of Western life.

He wrote pieces like this to preserve the atmosphere of a California that was rapidly disappearing — a world of ranchos, vaqueros, adobe towns, and traditions that had endured for generations. Norris's early stories often highlight moments of personal trial, where a character's inner nature is revealed through action, instinct, or courage. Felipe's story fits squarely into that theme.

Though Norris died young at just 32, his influence on American literature was enormous, and stories like this one show the range and sensitivity he brought to the short‑story form.

Transcript

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0:00.0

Welcome back, everyone to one thousand one classic short stories and tales.

0:18.4

This is your host, John Haggardorn.

0:20.4

Today, a great story from

0:21.6

Frank Norris, this one called The Writing of Felipe. This story takes us back to early California,

0:29.4

a time when the state was still a patchwork of ranchos, missions, Adobe villages, and wide-open

0:34.7

country. It was a world shaped by Spanish and Mexican traditions,

0:39.0

where horsemanship was a point of pride, and where a young writer's courage could become the

0:43.8

stuff of local legend. Frank Norris, best known for his powerful naturalist novels like

0:50.0

Mique Teague and the octopus, wrote the writing of Felipe earlier in his career during the late

0:55.4

1890s. At that time Norris was fascinated by the American West and by the fading cultures

1:01.2

that had existed there before the railroads, the land barons, and the new century swept in.

1:06.8

He often wrote short pieces that captured the color, tension, and human drama of frontier life.

1:12.1

And this story is one of those vivid sketches.

1:14.9

Norris was drawn to tales that revealed character under pressure, and the writing of Felipe reflects that interest.

1:21.0

It's a story about pride, daring, and the kind of test that can define a young man in the eyes of his community.

1:27.7

It also shows Norris' gift for blending action with atmosphere,

1:31.5

giving us a glimpse of California that was already disappearing by the time he put pen to paper.

1:37.3

So settle in as we return to that earlier world,

1:40.1

a world of dust, sunlight, spirited horses,

1:43.2

and the kind of challenge that could make a hero

1:45.1

out of a boy named Felipe.

2:06.3

As young Felipe Ara Laga guided his pony out of the last intricacies of Pacico Pass, he was thinking of Rubia I Turret and of the scene he had had with her just a few days before.

...

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