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Larry McMurtry's Tall Tales

3 days ago
  • #Literary Biography
  • #American West
  • #Myth and Reality
  • Larry McMurtry grew up in a storytelling Texas family, where the myth of the cowboy was central, but he became a writer who questioned and deconstructed that myth.
  • He argued that the American West's traditions were largely invented by writers, artists, and advertisers, and he spent his career exploring the tension between truth and fiction in Western history.
  • His early novels, like 'Horseman, Pass By' and 'The Last Picture Show,' depicted cowboys and small-town Texans as flawed, aimless, or trapped in a dying way of life, rejecting romantic nostalgia.
  • McMurtry's masterpiece, 'Lonesome Dove,' presents a cattle drive not as a heroic endeavor but as a haphazard, violent, and often absurd journey undertaken by deeply flawed characters.
  • He also worked in Hollywood, writing screenplays that sometimes softened his critiques but also produced groundbreaking works like 'Brokeback Mountain,' which challenged Western masculinity myths.
  • McMurtry himself was a mythmaker, often fictionalizing details of his own life, which a new biography by David Streitfeld explores, revealing his ambiguous relationship with the West's legends.
  • He believed that Americans, including himself, are inextricably tied to the illusions of the West, and his work aimed to clarify the often-violent realities behind those myths, such as in his commentary on immigration and Anglo history in Arizona.