home
***
CD-ROM
|
disk
|
FTP
|
other
***
search
/
TIME: Almanac 1990s
/
Time_Almanac_1990s_SoftKey_1994.iso
/
time
/
102990
/
1029470.000
< prev
next >
Wrap
Text File
|
1994-03-25
|
3KB
|
70 lines
<text id=90TT2853>
<title>
Oct. 29, 1990: Unhappy Trails
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1990
Oct. 29, 1990 Can America Still Compete?
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
BOOKS, Page 103
Unhappy Trails
</hdr>
<body>
<qt>
<l>BUFFALO GIRLS</l>
<l>by Larry McMurtry</l>
<l>Simon & Schuster; 351 pages; $19.95</l>
</qt>
<p> Few writers spin a better yarn than Larry McMurtry, whether
he's writing about the frost-free, air-conditioned suburbs of
Texas or the wild-and-woolly West of hangings and horse
trading. In his third historical novel, McMurtry is back on the
frontier, telling of its twilight through the final days of the
hard-drinking Calamity Jane, who proves that even buffalo girls
get the blues. So rawhide tough that many take her for a man
and so down on her luck that only a horse and saddlebags stand
between her and homelessness, Jane is willing to try anything
when Buffalo Bill Cody invites her to join his Wild West show
bound for England.
</p>
<p> Better for Jane to have stayed in the country McMurtry knows
best, where death waits just beyond the campfire or behind a
swinging saloon door, a place recreated so stunningly in the
Pulitzer-prize-winning Lonesome Dove. There McMurtry imbued the
Western archetype with existential musings, couch-ready angst
and buddy-movie sentiments, as two aging gunslingers give up
their three square meals a day for one last, impossible cattle
drive. But the old coots in Buffalo Girls can do no better than
join the equivalent of the circus, to make slapstick out of the
wonder of it all.
</p>
<p> It may be the failure to make even a marginal living
trapping beaver that has rendered this group so lifeless. Or
it could be the habit of drinking whisky by the vat nearly
every night. Whatever, these rough-and-tumble mountain men, the
preternaturally wise old Indian, No Ears, the whore with the
heart of gold, all are drawn broad enough for immediate
transfer to celluloid. They never fully tell us what it was
they had so we can mourn its passing with them.
</p>
<p> Buffalo Girls' most powerful moments come in Jane's letters
to her imaginary daughter. Full of regret for never settling
down, aching with loneliness, Calamity Jane dreams up a child
to give meaning to her senseless life and keep her from a
solitary death. As she lies dying, she writes, "I made up the
best life I could for you Janey, it is the opposite of the life
I have lived out here in this mess they call the west." In
Buffalo Girls, the West does not seem as mythic as it used to
be. Perhaps it never was.
</p>
<p>By Margaret Carlson.
</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>