Also printed as Bowleg Bill, the sea-going cowboy;: Or, Ship ahoy & let 'er buck!ASINB00086NDPK[4]
The book is a compilation of tall tales about a cowboy born in Wyoming to become a sailor, never an able-bodied one, but with many adventures, including the luring of whales with his music, capturing a mermaid, mutineering.[5]
"The Strange Adventure of the Cowboy-Sailor" in a 1948 collection New England bean-pot; American folk stories to read and to tell.[6] tells a story of Bowleg Bill meeting giant sea serpent and embark on a quest to find woman named Keziah.[7]
Harold W. Felton, Bowleg Bill, Seagoing Cowpuncher, Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey, Prentice-Hall, 1957. From review: " The exuberant chronicle of the exploits of Bowleg Bill, an eight-foot cowboy who rides herd on tuna fish and she-whales and he-whales, makes the most of two professions given to tall tales -- whaling and bronco-busting. The mixture of the jargon of the range and the poop-deck add to the incongruity of this beef-and-blubber comedy."[8]
^Man rides two-ton tuna. herds other fish. New England: Botkin American 192-204. 1944. Dorson American Scholar 10: 390-91. 1941 (Bowleg Bill), as cited in: Ernest W. Baughman, Type and Motif-Index of the Folktales of England and North America