I've started rereading The Sacketts by Louis L'Amour, along with The Sackett Companion that I recently purchased. The Companion lists the basic story along with a listing and description of all the characters, be they human or places/land. It's a nice combination, and expands knowledge of the background of places.
So far I've read the first three, they being:
Sackett's Land, To the Far Blue Mountains, and The Warrior's Path.
They tell the trials and tribulations of (obviously) the Sackett family in the early 1600's, both in England and America. Barnabas Sackett is the patriarch of the family and the story begins with his forced flight from England as a wanted man. But it's through no fault of his own, as he is an honorable man through and through. The second and third books tell the stories of his sons, mostly in America. L'Amour writes beautifully of the people and land. He has a pure view, but presents the bad along with the good. His knowledge of history is astounding, and he brings it to bear well in his stories. I love the way he presents the family as seekers, longing to know what lies beyond the Blue Mountain Range. These men were explorers, family men, and lovers of truth, honorable as Barnabas was, and treated others as they wished to be treated.
These early books are not "westerns" as such, although the later ones are of that genre. These speak of early Boston, before almost anyone was there, of Jamestown, etc. L'Amour tells the stories of explorers that came to this land hundreds of years before Columbus and his ilk.
Recommended.