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The Wandering Hill
 
 

The Wandering Hill [Large Print] (Hardcover)

by Larry McMurtry (Author) "THE old mountain man-tall, gaunt, furious, snow in his hair and beard, and murder in his eyes-burst into the big room of Pierre Boisdeffre's trading..." (more)
3.6 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (20 customer reviews)

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From Amazon.com

The Wandering Hill, the second volume in Larry McMurtry's The Berrybender Narratives, retains the humor of the first installment, Sin Killer, while establishing a more meditative mood. Picking up where Sin Killer left off, The Wandering Hill finds noble English family the Berrybenders waiting out the oncoming winter at a high plains trading post, delaying their hunting expedition through the frontier-era American west. Tight confines force the spirited, bickering Berrybenders to contend with one another, as well as an assortment of colorful attendants and raw trappers. Conflict has arisen between fiery and very pregnant heroine Tasmin and her stoical, evangelical mountain man husband Jim Snow, a.k.a. Sin Killer. Selfish, randy patriarch Lord Berrybender, having lost a leg, seven toes, and three fingers thus far on their journey (though not his "favorite appendage"), is slowly losing his sanity. Malicious youngest child Mary begins an odd pseudo-sexual friendship with naturalist Piet Van Wely, while "foppish" heir Bobbety's no less ambiguous relationship with priest Father Geoffrin inspires his father to accidentally stick his son in the eye with a fork. In between many such self-inflicted disasters, three children are born, fierce native tribes attack, a man is sewn into a buffalo carcass, and many lives are lost, often in the presence of a strange, mobile hill whose legendary appearance signals impending doom. McMurtry, meanwhile, continues the momentum he built with Sin Killer, offering graceful storytelling, wonderfully dimensional realism, and deadpan wit. The wintry Wandering Hill, however, diverges from Sin Killer's madcap activity to further consider the inner lives of many of its splendid characters. McMurtry will have his fans clamoring for an answer, though delighting in his wandering path toward a resolution. --Ross Doll --This text refers to an alternate Hardcover edition.


From Publishers Weekly

This is the second volume in McMurtry's four-book series the Berrybender Narratives, following last year's Sin Killer. Set in 1833 along the banks of the Yellowstone River, the comedic melodrama mixes unwashed mountain men with an arrogant, obnoxious and uncouth family of English aristocrats in a saga of high violence, low morals and lusty copulation. Lord Berrybender and his brood of selfish bumbling children, servants and mistress are touring the American West, shooting every animal in sight. The lord is a one-legged, drunken satyr who cares only for his own pleasure, and pokes his son's eye out with a fork. The rest of the family is just as self-centered and irresponsible. Eldest daughter Tasmin, a vulgar, opinionated woman, is married to enigmatic mountain man Jim Snow, known as the Sin Killer for his fervent brutality in the punishment of sin (not his own, of course). He cannot understand why Tasmin willfully refuses to be more like his two Indian wives, silent, obedient and submissive. Still, their love is passionate and so are their fistfights. The English group and a bunch of smelly, hairy mountain men winter over at a trading post through months of quarrels, meanness and downright coarse behavior, while marauding Sioux under the command of a white man-hating war chief called the Partezon gruesomely torture and slaughter any white they can catch. McMurtry tosses in famous hunters and mountain men like Hugh Glass, Kit Carson and Tom Fitzpatrick, plus a buffalo stampede, grizzly bears and an Indian ambush, but these are just props to support the soap-opera antics of the Berrybender clan. A few folks manage to get themselves killed, but there are plenty of annoying Englishmen left to people the next two volumes.
Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information, Inc. --This text refers to an alternate Hardcover edition.

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THE old mountain man-tall, gaunt, furious, snow in his hair and beard, and murder in his eyes-burst into the big room of Pierre Boisdeffre's trading post just as the English party was sitting down to table-the table being only a long trestle of rough planks near the big fireplace, where a great haunch of elk dripped on its spit. Read the first page
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20 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
3.6 out of 5 stars (20 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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2.0 out of 5 stars Still waiting........, Jul 18 2004
By pjaatpdx (portland, or United States) - See all my reviews
This book will be a dissapointment to Lonesome Dove fans. I did not see character development to speak of, action was absent, plot was thin, and after 400 pages, I was still waiting for some excitement. As part of a 1600 page book (four novels), it might be ok, but not as a stand alone work. I'm glad I only spent the money for a paperback.
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3.0 out of 5 stars Aimless wandering makes for indifferent reading, April 19 2004
By Joseph Haschka (Glendale, CA USA) - See all my reviews
Aimless wandering seems to be the theme of THE WANDERING HILL, and it suffers for it.

First off, the "Wandering Hill" is a small, conical mound, topped by a single tree, inhabited by large-headed devils who, according to plains-Indian legend, loose deadly grass-bladed arrows at passersby. The devils have the ability to move the hill from place to place via the wind, and its appearance is Heap Bad Medicine. Yeah, ok, but it's not given such significant play that it's worth getting excited about. Trust me.

This novel is the second in the Berrybender series, the first being SIN KILLER. Berrybender is Lord Albany Berrybender, an Englishmen who's come to the Great Plains of the 1830s to hunt accompanied by his wife Constance, six of their fourteen brats, the talking parrot Prince Talleyrand, and a rabble of servants, all traveling up the Yellowstone River by steamboat. By THE WANDERING HILL, Constance, one of the offspring, and several employees are dead or missing. The eldest of Berrybender's children along for the ride, daughter Tasmin, has married the Sin Killer, aka Jim Snow, a young, closed-mouthed, and excessively God-fearing trapper whose attitude towards his new wife, outside of their lovemaking, is boorish at best.

The biggest problem with the Berrybender series to date, and THE WANDERING HILL in particular, is that there's no strong unifying thread to the storyline. In McMurtry's magnificent LONESOME DOVE, there were also many subplots to be sure, but all eventually tied into Gus McCrae's and Woodrow Call's cattle drive from South Texas to Montana. In the Berrybender saga, we have only the intent of Lord Albany to continue on with his hunting expedition, which is proving to be a weak nail on which to hang the continuing story. In THE WANDERING HILL, they don't get far at all. Having left the confines of the riverboat, the Berrybender party spends over half the book at an Indian trading post, where Tasmin and Venetia Kennet, the group's cellist, have babies. Then, after some aimless wandering about, they subsequently all set off to an annual trapper rendezvous in the Rocky Mountain foothills.

THE WANDERING HILL even lacks a decent villain. In LONESOME DOVE, it was Blue Duck, a murderous half-breed. In SIN KILLER, it was Draga, a psychopathic, old, Aleut-Russian squaw who'd made it down to the Lower Forty-Eight. In this book, there's only relatively passing reference to The Partezon, a vicious Sioux chief on the rampage with a war party. Otherwise, the biggest danger is posed by the sudden appearance of several thousand stampeding buffalo. Yawn.

Since the overall direction of storyline is unremarkable, the reader must find limited enjoyment in the depiction of the various characters. And pickings are slim when it comes to engaging personae. Tasmin, the Lord's strong-willed, resilient daughter, is the most appealing of all. Next is perhaps Kit Carson, who, at this stage of his legendary career, is a tongue-tied, shy youth prone to complaining about minor hardships. Then there's the precocious, four-year old Kate Berrybender, who manages to win the heart of Jim Snow, who is, in my opinion, too much of a jerk to be a heroic figure. Lord Berrybender himself is so disagreeable a person that I wish he'd just die off or get killed. No such luck.

One newly introduced character whom I hope gets a larger role in the next book, BY SORROW'S RIVER, is the Sin Killer's inscrutable and too young Ute wife, Little Onion.

Despite my ambivalent feelings towards this second volume in the series, I'm certain that I'll continue reading to the end because of the plucky Tasmin. If a film is ever made of the Berrybender narratives, then I'd recommend Cate Blanchett for the role.

This series isn't Larry McMurtry at his best, but it's adequate diversion for the beach or the morning train commute.

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4.0 out of 5 stars A fun read, Feb 27 2004
By R. Kent Bailey (Tampa, FL United States) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
So what happens when you place an aristocratic British family and their servants, a bunch of mountain men, and various Indian tribes together in the American west? The Berrybender Narratives, of course.

A Child of prvilege, Tasmin Berrybender, finds herself married to a dark and sometimes violent mountain man, and traveling across the American west with her family and their entourage in search of game for her often drunk and half mad father, Lord Berrybender, to shoot.

Although the purpose of their journey is to hunt game, the real story revolves around all of the conflicts that arise when these wonderfully drawn characters are put together. Can Tasmin tame her dark husband, the Sin Killer, or will the harsh life of the plains tame her? Will Lord Berrybender ever get the servants and women to stop being so american and start following his orders again? Will any of them make it out of the west alive? These questions kept me turning the pages of this book 2 of the Berrybender Narratives even though I never read Book 1.

This story is not about cowboys and indians. It is about wildly diffeent people trying to survive in a brutal environment together.

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Most recent customer reviews

4.0 out of 5 stars Entertaining book
As entertaining as Sin Killer, I couln't put it down.
Published on Dec 6 2003

4.0 out of 5 stars Part of a great McMurtry series
You can read this as a stand-alone book, but I think it's better if you read it as it's intended: the second in a 4-book series, The Berrybender Narratives. Read more
Published on Oct 17 2003 by Peggy Vincent

2.0 out of 5 stars Pointless
This book was a waste of time. I kept hoping it would get better, that some purpose or plot would develop -- but nothing. Read more
Published on Sep 27 2003

4.0 out of 5 stars The Berrybenders, You just have to love them.
The continuation of their journey up the Yellowstone River into wild Indian country, with action and tempers flaring, pregnant women, babies, stampedes, fornication and lust... Read more
Published on Sep 1 2003 by Reeda

4.0 out of 5 stars AND THE PLOT THICKENS
The story continues with the Berrybender clan, one of the most interesting and dysfunctional groups ever tackled by the famed western author, Larry McMurtry. Read more
Published on Aug 25 2003

4.0 out of 5 stars Berrybender Saga Continues
This book picks up right where Sin Killer left off. Literally. I read these books consecutively and they could easily had been packaged as one six hundred pager. Read more
Published on Aug 18 2003 by Wayne A. Smith

4.0 out of 5 stars Part II of the Berrybender's Western Travels
This book picks up right where "Sin Killer" left off. Literally. I read these books consecutively and they could easily had been packaged as one six hundred... Read more
Published on Aug 6 2003 by Wayne A. Smith

3.0 out of 5 stars worth reading
I was disappointed in "Sin Killer," the first volume of the Berrybender Narratives. This volume, the second, is an improvement. Read more
Published on Aug 5 2003 by Bryant Burnette

4.0 out of 5 stars The Berrybenders Blurb
It's no Lonesome Dove,but I need a McMurtry fix!I love all his characters,especially Pomp,and Little Onion.Read it and get a taste of LD.Can't wait for the next book!
Published on Jul 23 2003

4.0 out of 5 stars McMurtry and the Berrybenders Still Have It
Larry McMurtry's The Wandering Hill is quite an enjoyable tale, not quite as good as Sin Killer, but still excellent. Read more
Published on Jul 20 2003 by Elizabeth Hendry

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