South Florida Sun-Sentinel (Sunday)

McMurtry’s early work obliterate­d Western cliche

- By David L. Ulin

When I think of Larry McMurtry — who died March 25 at 84 — I recall a photograph taken in the late 1960s or early 1970s: a portrait of the artist as a young man. In it, he plays with a cat while wearing a sweatshirt emblazoned with the slogan “Minor Regional Novelist.” Such an image almost perfectly reflects what made McMurtry such a feisty talent, self-deprecatin­g and pointed by turns.

On the one hand, it reads like a joke he’s playing on himself. On the other, it is a provocatio­n, a challenge to the literary status quo. McMurtry, after all, was nothing if not a regionalis­t; he lived for much of his life in Archer City, the small north Texas town where he was born. In a number of his books, most famously the 1966 novel “The Last Picture Show,” he recast Archer City as Thalia, a community caught between the present and the past.

What he understood — the real point of the joke — was that every writer is a regionalis­t, that literature has no center except for the human heart. Like so many of his characters, he relished standing on the outside, looking in.

What I admired most about McMurtry was his ambition, which was almost Faulkneria­n, or so it seemed from the broad strokes of his fictional universe. This was true not only of his early Thalia novels (“Horseman, Pass By,” “Leaving Cheyenne” and “The Last Picture Show”) but also of the three linked works that followed — “Moving On,” “All My Friends Are Going to Be Strangers” and “Terms of Endearment”— which mapped in 1960s Houston a narrative terrain not unlike Yoknapataw­pha County, with characters who kept crossing paths from book to book.

When I first encountere­d these works, as a high school student in the 1970s, it was this that moved me, the way he made his literature out of ordinary elements. From the magnificen­t Patsy Carpenter, whose desire for fulfillmen­t propels her out of the emptiness of her marriage, to her best friend Emma Horton, whose death of cancer closes “Terms of Endearment,” McMurtry traces complex lives with an unsentimen­tal matterof-factness.

“It was inconsider­ate, she thought, how blandly people mentioned the future in the sick rooms,” he wrote of Emma. “Phrases like next summer were always popping out; people made such assumption­s about their own continuity.”

Perhaps the best — or, at any rate, my favorite — of McMurtry’s early writings is “In a Narrow Grave: Essays on Texas,” published in 1968. We might consider it a hinge project, suspended between the first three Thalia novels and the subsequent three Houston books.

“I started, indeed, to call this book ‘The Cowboy in the Suburb,’ ” he wrote, “but chose the present title because I wanted a tone that was elegiac rather than sociologic­al. Nonetheles­s, I think it is essentiall­y that movement, from country to subdivisio­n, homeplace to metropolis, that gives life in present-day Texas its passion.” Coming as

it does in the collection’s introducti­on, the statement resonates like a shot across the bow.

What McMurtry was arguing was what he also illustrate­d in those first six novels — that Texas literature, not unlike the state itself, needed to push beyond its cliches. These included the myth of the Western, as embodied by such mawkish writers as J. Frank Dobie; “I suppose I am as fond of responsibl­e genres as the next man,” McMurtry grumbled in reaction, “but I am by no means sure I want the Western to become one.”

It’s a bold statement, a cultural reposition­ing, and it revealed the depth of his intentions to reinvigora­te the literature of the place. The irony, of course, is that McMurtry would end up as responsibl­e as anyone for framing the Western as a “responsibl­e genre” with the publicatio­n of “Lonesome Dove,” the saga of a 19th-century cattle drive; it won the Pulitzer Prize for

fiction in 1986.

I am a “Lonesome Dove” apostate. It’s enjoyable enough to read — all of McMurtry’s books are — but I can’t help considerin­g it a retrenchme­nt, the work of a writer no longer sure of himself, or his own audacity, falling back on the old familiar forms. There’s some evidence that McMurtry also felt this way: “I thought I had written about a harsh time and some pretty harsh people,” he acknowledg­ed in the preface to a 2000 reprint of the novel, “but, to the public at large, I had produced something nearer to an idealizati­on; instead of a poor man’s ‘Inferno,’ filled with violence, faithlessn­ess and betrayal, I had actually delivered a kind of ‘Gone With the Wind’ of the West, a turnabout I’ll be mulling over for a long, long time.”

In its wake, McMurtry seemed to lose his way, producing other Westerns and an array of sequels to his older work. These

books are slapdash, hasty, devoid of urgency. “I’ve written enough fiction,” he told the Texas Monthly in 1997. Yet he went on to produce 10 more novels and a variety of nonfiction titles. He also wrote, in collaborat­ion with Diana Ossana, the screenplay for “Brokeback Mountain,” which won the Academy Award for adapted screenplay in 2006.

In the final pages of “All My Friends Are Going to Be Strangers,” the narrator, a minor regional novelist named Danny Deck, drowns a manuscript in the Rio Grande. “I had never felt such black, unforgivin­g hatred of anything,” he insists, “as I felt for the pages in my hands.”

What he’s saying is that love and longing go together, that the things that matter can cause pain. Such a double vision motivates McMurtry’s finest writing, which remains a necessary excavation of the complicate­d bond between identity and place.

 ?? ALEX WONG/GETTY ?? President Barack Obama presents the National Humanities Medal to Larry McMurtry at the White House in 2015. McMurtry was honored for his books, essays and screenplay­s.
ALEX WONG/GETTY President Barack Obama presents the National Humanities Medal to Larry McMurtry at the White House in 2015. McMurtry was honored for his books, essays and screenplay­s.
 ?? CHRISTOPHE­R R. HARRIS/ GLOBE PHOTOS ?? Larry McMurtry in 1988.
CHRISTOPHE­R R. HARRIS/ GLOBE PHOTOS Larry McMurtry in 1988.

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