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Horseman Pass By
 
 

Horseman Pass By (Paperback)

de Larry Mcmurtry (Author) "For dessert that night Halmea made a big freezerful of peach ice cream, rich as Jersey milk and thick with hunks of sweet, lockerplant Albertas..." En savoir plus
4.2étoiles sur 5  Voir tous les commentaires (10 évaluations de client)

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Growing to manhood on his granddad's cattle ranch, Lonnie idolizes Hud, a wild womanizer with a will of his own and many enemies. Reprint. NYT. This text refers to an alternate Paperback edition.

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4.2étoiles sur 5 (10 évaluations de client)
 
 
 
 
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5.0étoiles sur 5 Not the movie, but equally good. . ., Mai 17 2004
Par Ronald Scheer "rockysquirrel" (Los Angeles) - Voir tous mes commentaires
(REAL NAME)   
This was Larry McMurtry's first novel, published in 1961, long before "Lonesome Dove." It's also his first of several books set in and around the small Texas town of Thalia. The story was quickly transformed into a Paul Newman film "Hud" in 1963, which is the version of the story most people know. In spirit, the two stories are similar - they are both anti-westerns, in which code of the West is subverted and corrupted by failure of moral character.

But McMurtry's novel tells a story with a darker vision. At the center is Lonnie, the teenager growing up on his grandfather's ranch, and it's through his eyes that we see the cold, self-serving indifference of his uncle Hud. Still a boy, unschooled in much of anything besides the dawn-to-dusk labor of ranch work, Lonnie is no moral center, following his grandfather's example. In many ways, he accepts Hud's violent behavior, his disrespect for the old man, and his ruthless use of women as a kind of norm. In the end, as he leaves the ranch, he takes the first steps toward a life that may well be no more rewarding or purposeful than that of the regretful hired hand Jesse, who gets too drunk to ride his cutting horse in the rodeo.

To streamline the story, the film has scaled back or eliminated interesting key characters like Jesse, another ranch hand Lonzo, a neighbor Hank, and a friend Hermy, who is badly injured trying to ride a bull. Also, by casting a white woman in the role of the black cook Halmea (Patricia Neal's Alma), the film sidesteps a racial dimension that the novel brings to the story.

So for readers who know and like the film, this is a very different telling of the story and well worth reading. As usual in McMurtry's early novels, there is a richly detailed capturing of character, speech, and setting. He knows these people inside and out, how they think, talk, and behave. He also totally deromanticizes ranch work, representing it as mercilessly hot, dusty, and exhausting. The small-town rodeo, with its drinking, womanizing cowboys, fares little better. I heartily recommend this novel for anyone interested in the rural West and ranching, along with McMurtry's more melancholy but less bleak "Leaving Cheyenne."

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3.0étoiles sur 5 Not Especially Realistic, but his best., Avril 26 2004
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As my title indicates, if this book were realistic, the kid would have shot the s.o.b. Hud when he caught him in a rape. The book would have ended there. It follows that although the rape was pure Hud, the kid, whom McMurtry didn't really intend to be a chicken, stepped out of character. A fatal defect. This book takes a lot of suspension of belief. It beats hell out of Lonesome Dove in which two Texas rangers, retired after twenty years service in the Rangers (as of the year they were officially formed) are cavoting along the Rio Grande at the little burg of Lonesome Dove, and there is not a tree to be found for twenty miles. Where was that along the Rio Grande? Today, of course, there are places where there's no water to be found for twenty miles. Is Larry kidding? I think so in every book he's written. An avid fan I ain't.
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5.0étoiles sur 5 Another Accurate Presentation of Life as it Was in Texas!, Mai 31 2003
Par Evelyn Horan (California) - Voir tous mes commentaires
(TOP 500 REVIEWER)   
A modern day son in conflict with a father who clings to the "old ways" of the West in this gripping story of life set a small Texas town and a nearby ranch during the last days of the Old West still held only in a father's memories,now sets the mood and tone of the book. A "true-to-life" event that has occurred more than once in a changing Texas for many of us who can attest to these changes having been reared in Texas with roots and ties to such folks. A great read!
Evelyn Horan - teacher/counselor/author
Jeannie, A Texas Frontier Girl, Books One - Three
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Commentaires client les plus récents

5.0étoiles sur 5 Evocative classic
This book was my introduction to Larry McMurtry, and I intend to read many more of his books based on this classic. Read more
Publié le Janv. 10 2002 par Westley

3.0étoiles sur 5 No Lonesome Dove...
This book starts off good. You get to know all the charachters and feel like you are sitting down for meals with them. Then things start to spin out of control. Read more
Publié le Sep 25 2001

4.0étoiles sur 5 Bittersweet
Next to "Lonesome Dove", "Horseman, Pass by" is another book by McMurtry I truly enjoyed. Read more
Publié le Juil 18 2001 par spideranansie

3.0étoiles sur 5 Evocative but nebulous
Larry McMurtry does an excellent job in the presentation of cattle country in 1950's Texas. You can literally see all the dust, smell the sweat of the cowhands, and sense the... Read more
Publié le Jui 4 2001 par IRA Ross

5.0étoiles sur 5 A sign of great things to come
McMurtry's first novel is a spare, eloquent evocation of thepassing of the Old West. In its description of the decline and deathof an old rancher, it paints a vivid picture of... Read more
Publié le Mai 30 2000 par Tyler Smith

4.0étoiles sur 5 Enthralling Narrative
I recently discovered this 'early' Larry McMurtry novel having read many of his later works. this rites of passage story is intriguing and disturbing. Read more
Publié le Jui 8 1999

5.0étoiles sur 5 This book is incredibly touching and poignant.
Horseman, Pass By is quite a departure for McMurty, being very different from his "Lonesome Dove" works. Read more
Publié le Déc 27 1998

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