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Texasville
  

Texasville (Paperback)

by Larry McMurtry (Author) "Duane was in the hot tub, shooting at his new doghouse with a .44 Magnum ..." (more)
3.6 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (20 customer reviews)

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From Publishers Weekly

In this arresting, funny-sad sequel to The Last Picture Show, McMurtry's small Texas town of Thalia has gone from boom to bust practically overnight, a victim of the mid-'80s oil glut. Under the strain of financial calamity, the townsfolk are becoming increasingly irrationalone man dreams of bombing OPEC, the mayor is going quietly mad, sexual mores are turning bizarre, and the civic leaders are pressing on with a centennial celebration even though there's nothing to celebrate. The stresses of the time seem concentrated in Duane, a one-time oil millionaire on the verge of bankruptcy who has four untamable children, a disaffected wife and a diminishing grip on his sanity. Duane's problems are exacerbated when his high school sweetheart, Jacy, now a movie actress, comes bowling into town like tumbleweed. McMurtry, who won a Pulitzer Prize for Lonesome Dove, is a writer with a distinctive voice, a profound understanding of Texans and a brilliant gift for capturing the vagrant moods of the heart. Major ad/promo; reprint rights to Pocket Books; BOMC selection.
Copyright 1987 Reed Business Information, Inc. --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.


From Library Journal

Can a novel that deals with midlife crises, the loss of youthful aspirations, the withering of love, and the entombing of dreams be side-splittingly funny? This one is. Pulitzer Prize winner McMurtry returns to Thalia, Texas, setting of The Last Picture Show , where the once lovelorn teenagers are now town fathers planning a county centennial celebration. But what's there to celebrate? The town got rich with the oil boom and is now going broke with the oil glut, and its residents seem as sunk in emotional depression as the town is in its economic one. What McMurtry's characters take most seriously and worry most about inevitably turns out comically. The unplanned high points of the celebration are a tumbleweed stampede, broom-handle battles between teetotalers and beer-guzzlers, and an egg bombardment. For some this may seem a less than satisfying sequel to The Last Picture Show , but it is a more mature book, less angry, more tolerant, and more accepting of human foibles. Recommended. BOMC main selection. Charles Michaud, Turner Free Library, Randolph, Mass.
Copyright 1987 Reed Business Information, Inc. --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

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3.6 out of 5 stars (20 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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4.0 out of 5 stars When life doesn't live up to expectations. . ., Jun 18 2004
By Ronald Scheer "rockysquirrel" (Los Angeles) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Texasville: A Novel (Paperback)
Thirty years have passed since Duane Moore and Sonny Crawford graduated from high school in Thalia, Texas. The events of "The Last Picture Show" are a distant memory to everyone except Sonny, who continues to live in the past and occasionally gets lost there. Duane has married, gotten rich in the oil boom, raised a bunch of kids, built a 12,000-square-foot house outside of town, and is now $12 million in debt. The boom is over, and disappointment, the dominant mood of the characters in McMurtry's earlier book, is settling in again.

This time, however, disappointment and depression are mostly played for laughs. Sonny, the poignant central character in "Picture Show," has been sidelined in this story by Duane's domestic conflicts, his efforts to remain optimistic in the face of bankruptcy, and his affair with a married woman who is also carrying on with Duane's dope-dealing, womanizing son. McMurtry plays up the ironies and absurdities of life in Thalia where, as Duane observes, everyone seems to have gone crazy. The married and unmarried swap partners with the free-for-all abandon of romance as it's portrayed in country and western songs. And a kind of lunacy grips others, whose adventures push the narrative into wildly implausible episodes of farce, such as a mammoth egg-throwing fight on the closing night of Thalia's centennial celebration.

The melancholy mood that dominates "The Last Picture Show" makes only a brief appearance in this much longer novel, as Duane remembers a young employee killed in Vietnam. And readers, like me, who are fans of McMurtry's earlier work, will be disappointed that McMurtry treats the sorrows of his characters this time so lightly. At worst, the behavior of the town's residents gives Duane headaches and he comes to a realization that his "success" as an oilman and a respected citizen is not an achievement that gives him much self-esteem. The liberated 1980s women in his life (wife Karla, mistress Suzy, and old high school sweetheart Jacy) constantly remind him that he's less than adequate as a man. And at 48, he understands that he no longer has the energy he once had.

Meanwhile, there are pleasures to be had in the novel. In particular, I enjoyed the endless varieties of ironic and humorous disputes that characterize the verbal exchanges between the characters. Duane has a comic ruefulness that both protects him and reveals his vulnerability. And finally, that is the central theme of this novel as all the middle-aged characters (and there are a host of them) try in one way or another to come to terms with lives that haven't lived up to expectations.

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5.0 out of 5 stars I love it anyway, Aug 21 2002
This review is from: Texasville (Mass Market Paperback)
The common theme among the other reviewers seems to be that "it ain't no Last Picture Show." While I can recognize that LPS is a more tightly constructed book in the English class, reading it for credit context, I think this book actually has more life. The action is absurd in many respects, and the characters do selfish things, but there's a buoyant feeling to the whole business. Sometimes, driving down the road, I think of how Duane's dog, Shorty, rode away from Duane "looking inscrutable," and I just crack up. This is McMurtry doing what he does best.
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4.0 out of 5 stars A different book for a different era, Oct 15 2001
By Matthew J Wells (Ottawa, Ontario Canada) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Texasville: A Novel (Paperback)
I haven't read many of Larry McMurtry's early books so far, so I don't know if he's not living up to his earlier promise, as some people contend. I did, however, like Texasville quite a bit. The contrast that McMurtry is trying to show here is quite obvious: while life in 50s-era The Last Picture Show was miserably simple, modern life in Texasville is horribly complex. The book is "wacky", and it is long and rambling compared to TLPS, but it reflects the situation in mid-80s Thalia much like TLPS reflected its own time. The story is episodic, like TLPS, but there are many more episodes to cover this time around.

What is interesting in this story is that the characters have had every chance to lead happy lives, yet they are not happy at all. Most of them were at once time rich and successful, but this seems to have made their lives more complicated without actually improving them. Duane and Karla, the two main characters in the story, have bought lots of stuff and have both had more than a few affairs, which distracted them from the fact that they were growing apart. The other characters in the story are in similar predicaments. When the money runs out, chaos erupts. So how could the story not be sort of wacky? It is interesting to see who becomes aware of their unhapppness, and how they deal with it.

This book is also quite funny. The oil bust-era may also remind you of the current high-tech bust. Many of the charactres seem to be in similar situations as today's former dot-com millionaires. I think most readers of TLPS will not de disappointed if they keep an open mind.

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Most recent customer reviews

2.0 out of 5 stars Fans of Sonny from "The Last Picture Show" beware!
The Last Picture Show is one of my favourite novels, but this sequel made we wish I had left the characters' futures in my imagination alone. Read more
Published on Jul 19 2001

3.0 out of 5 stars yee-haw! + ho-hum
Lots of fun. I read this shortly after "The Last Picture Show" and was pleasantly jolted by the contrasts between the two books, especially in tone and situation. Read more
Published on Feb 5 2001 by David Oconnell

5.0 out of 5 stars Hilarious Sequel
I thought this book was a knee-slapper. The characters are zany and enjoyable. I find that people who don't enjoy sequels - seem to be expect the same story as the original,... Read more
Published on Jan 30 2001

3.0 out of 5 stars Who lives like this??
Reading this book, I tried hard not to compare it to McMurtry's other works. I wanted this book to stand on it's own and not fall victim to the "It isn't Lonesome Dove"... Read more
Published on Dec 18 2000 by K J Bedford

5.0 out of 5 stars Texasville
I do so agree with Reader of Indiana who says that this is the funniest book s/he has read. I found a most battered copy of 'Texasville' in a hotel library in Malaysia and began... Read more
Published on Oct 27 2000 by L.P.Wright

5.0 out of 5 stars Texasville
I read this book a while ago, but it has stuck in my memory ever since. I thought this book was the funniest book I'd ever read. Read more
Published on Dec 8 1999

2.0 out of 5 stars Texasville
Texasville is an interesting contrast to it's prequel, The Last Picture Show. In Picture Show each lesson, each experience ripples with importance. Read more
Published on Dec 1 1999

2.0 out of 5 stars Exhausting with not one likable character
Don't get me wrong, I LOVE Larry McMurtry. I think he has written half a dozen classics, at least. I had planned to read everything he has written; this book however, made me... Read more
Published on Oct 26 1999 by greenwoodscs@juno.com

3.0 out of 5 stars Lengthy / Long winded book
This sequel to the "The Last Picture Show" came out almost twenty years after the initial release. However, it probably shouldn't have come out. Read more
Published on Oct 13 1999

4.0 out of 5 stars Entertaining sequel
This sequel to "The Last Picture Show" focuses on the residents of Thalia, Texas 32 years later, as they prepare to celebrate the county's centennial. Read more
Published on April 20 1999

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