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Revising the Myth


Article # : 15796 

Section : BOOK WORLD
Issue Date : 1 / 1989  2,416 Words
Author : Tom Pilkington
Tom Pilkington is University Scholar and Regents Professor of English at Tarleton State University, Stephenville, Texas. He is the author or editor of thirteen books, including Critical Essays on the Western American Novel and State of Mind: Texas Literature and Culture. He is a former president of the Western Literature Association.

       Larry McMurtry's twelfth novel, Anything for Billy, surprises by revisiting a theme that the author, just four or five years ago, appeared to have abandoned for good. Of all his previous books, McMurtry's Pulitzer Prize-winning Lonesome Dove (1985) seems the new novel's most likely antecedent. In intent and setting, if not in execution and artistry, the two works are very similar.
       
        Both transport the reader back in time to the elusive, fabled "old West." Both attempt to examine the mythmaking process and, obliquely, to distinguish between the myth and the reality of that unique landscape of American history. Indeed, both apparently were intended to undermine the myth of the West and to demonstrate its pernicious effects on the American psyche, past and present.
       
        Lonesome Dove, the chronicle of a quixotic trail drive ramrodded by a pair of former Texas Rangers, Woodrow Call and Gus McCrae, clearly calls into question the myth of the cowboy. Clara, Gus' old girlfriend, no doubt speaks for the author when she gives Call a tongue-lashing that leaves him perplexed but unmoved.
       
        Clara, who loved Gus, had chosen a plodding, dependable man to be her mate and father to her children--a practical decision that highlights the disparity between the cowboy myth and the values of community and of family and child-rearing. Clara tells Call:
       
        I'm sorry you and Gus McCrae ever met. All you two done
        was ruin one another, not to mention those close to you…I
        didn't want to fight you for him every day of my life. You
        men and your promises: they're just excuses to do what you
        plan to do anyway, which is leave. You think you've always
        done right--that's your ugly pride, Mr. Call. But you
        never did right and it would be a sad woman that needed
        anything from you. You're a vain coward, for all your
        fighting. I despised you then, for what you were, and I
        despise you now, for what you're doing.
       
        Lonesome Dove offers many passages and incidents that illustrate the foolishness of the cowboy's ultra-masculine code
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