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Blood on the Saddle
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15794 |
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BOOK WORLD
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1 / 1989 |
3,385 Words |
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Don Graham Don Graham is the J. Frank Dobie Regents Professor of American
and English literature at the University of Texas at Austin.
His books include Cowboys and Cadillacs: How Hollywood Looks
at Texas (1983), Texas: A Literary Portrait (1985), and (ed.)
South by Southwest: 24 Stories from Modern Texas (1986). His
biography of Audie Murphy, No Name on the Bullet, will be
published by Viking in August 1989. |
Larry McMurtry, Texas' best-known novelist, once wore a T-shirt bearing the legend "Minor Regional Novelist." There wouldn't be any reason to wear it today, not after Lonesome Dove. When that book soared to million-plus sales, won the Pulitzer Prize for fiction, and became everybody's favorite western novel, McMurtry's bid for a national audience seemed secure. There were other signs of his having arrived. Texasville, his follow-up novel, garnered a thoughtful review in the New York Review of Books, accompanied by the ne plus ultra of literary status, a David Levine caricature. In a further sign of literary respect, the Harper American Literature (1987), a new anthology aimed at university audiences, included an excerpt from The Last Picture Show.
McMurtry's national success confirmed what his long-standing and loyal Texas audience had always felt: that his best work is strongly rooted in the region he knows from the ground up, chiefly Texas and, by extension, the Southwest.
Roots in Texas Ranch Culture
Born in Wichita Falls in 1936, McMurtry lived in Archer City, a small town northwest of Fort Worth, for the first eighteen years of his life. The young McMurtry knew ranching culture intimately and saw it during a time of transition and decline. His grandparents were pioneers, and memories of the epic trail-driving era of the late nineteenth century echoed in family talk on front porches in those long evenings on the plains. McMurtry's Texas changed radically during the period when he came to maturity. In 1940 the population was 60 percent rural; in 1960 it was 60 percent urban. Belonging to that generation of Texans who left
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