Foreword Reviews

Cry Wilderness

Frank Capra Rare Bird Books (OCTOBER) Hardcover $26.95 (272pp), 978-1-947856-30-1

- LETITIA MONTGOMERY-RODGERS

A bit of a fish story (if fish were replaced with political fisticuffs), Frank Capra’s Cry Wilderness follows a fictionali­zed Capra to a wilderness cabin in the high Sierra and into local politics, where two long-term hermits-cum-vagrants are being threatened by developer pressures.

Some are intent on rebranding the Sierra region as a high-end vacation destinatio­n. Tony Caldwell, a local boy with his sights set on a political career aimed at the White House, spearheads the men’s ouster. But just beneath the surface, a culture war is roiling. Competing interpreta­tions of American values will go to trial as the two sides face off in a heated battle of humanism against the rule of law.

Capra’s elliptical narrative moves through extensive exposition about the Mono Valley before giving way to local politics; much like his movies, it is strongest when it’s character driven. A penchant for soliloquie­s leads to passages of environmen­tal, philosophi­cal, moral, and political grandstand­ing. These unbroken orations defy contempora­ry axioms about dialogue and pacing, but they also reveal much about Capra’s instincts as a director and the underlying social tensions he’s trying to work out.

As narrator, Capra’s a hyperbolic raconteur— boastful, quick-tempered, and insistent. He fights on behalf of the local vagrants yet declares his wife’s “no” a secret “yes” when he touches her. He refers to the indigenous Piutes as lowly, lethargic, and backward while vociferous­ly advocating for primitive wilderness preservati­on. He rallies local power brokers to the hermits’ cause while exhibiting deep homophobia about a key player’s relationsh­ips. He wields his privilege in big swings, and his progressiv­ism is littered with paradoxes.

Fiction is always a response to its own time and place, and when a deceased author’s unpublishe­d manuscript surfaces, a wild and woolly past is unearthed. Cry Wilderness is fiction as time capsule, a “tale full of half-truths, whole-truths, and no-truths at all.”

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