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LARRY MCMURTRY by Tracy Daugherty Kirkus Star

LARRY MCMURTRY

A Life

by Tracy Daugherty

Pub Date: Sept. 12th, 2023
ISBN: 9781250282330
Publisher: St. Martin's

The late Pulitzer Prize–winning Texas novelist receives a thoughtful yet appropriate critical treatment in the hands of literary biographer Daugherty.

Larry McMurtry (1936-2021) once said that he was “drawn to stories of vanishing crafts…or trades,” such as cowboying and bookselling. The Last Picture Show (1966) was a perfect example, a depiction of a tiny crossroads town in north Texas, where McMurtry grew up, where there was nothing for young people to do and, with the death of the town’s moral heart and patriarch, no hope for a brighter future. The author got out of that town, Archer City, as soon as he could, partly to get away from a malevolent father who had little sympathy for his bookish son’s interests. So it was that McMurtry wound up in Houston, teaching at Rice University and scouting for books while building the wherewithal for a bookshop of his own. He frequently retreated to back rooms and moldy basements to write, and if Sherman Alexie criticized his later revisionist Western Lonesome Dove as colonial, McMurtry gave voice to many a voiceless Texan, especially the taciturn, repressed women of his small-town youth. Daugherty, who has chronicled the lives of Donald Barthelme, Joan Didion, and Joseph Heller, is a perceptive critic who isn’t shy pointing out that McMurtry’s literary output was of decidedly mixed quality. He would write a classic like Last Picture Show, then follow it up with a sequel—or, in this case, several sequels—that tended to make the collective whole weaker. McMurtry’s vision of the disappearing frontier and of the dead-end hamlets that followed it yielded his best work (including Horseman, Pass By and Streets of Laredo), but his later-in-life projects with partner Diana Ossana on screenplays such as Brokeback Mountain will endure, too. Despite his frequent ill temper and hermetic tendencies, McMurtry emerges as a well-rounded, if quirky human—and certainly a memorable one.

A definitive life of the novelist/bookseller/scriptwriter/curmudgeon of interest to any McMurtry fan.