In these essays, originally published in the New York Review of Books, Larry McMurtry examines Western writers as mythmakers. Overall, however, his most interesting pieces are those in which he pays tribute to authors who have influenced his own work or have left behind literary treasures he finds moving and wise. One of the essays is devoted to historian Angie Debo and her influence on McMurtry\u27s development as a writer. As a youth he accidentally found The Road to Disappearance (1941), her history of the Creek Indians, and discovered that Debo, from neighboring Oklahoma, had made for herself a life devoted to writing. Her example taught McMurtry that, despite the limited opportunities in the Great Plains region, one could organize one\...
Patricia Loughlin has written an excellent work about three female scholars specializing in Native s...
Much contemporary western writing, including memoirs such as Judy Blunt\u27s Breaking Clean (2003), ...
In the North American Review for 1815, Walter Channing suggested that America could compensate for i...
In these essays, originally published in the New York Review of Books, Larry McMurtry examines Weste...
This remarkable collection of essays offers something for every reader interested in Montana literat...
West of 98 is an ambitious and comprehensive collection of personal essays and poems by over sixty c...
In his recent travel book, Roads: Driving America\u27s Great Highways, Larry McMurtry declares himse...
From time to time, a serious book excites the imaginations of a vaster public than the audience of s...
Montana Legacy is a sequel to the well-received 1992 anthology, The Montana Heritage. Like its prede...
Literary Life is the second entry of Larry McMurtry\u27s projected trilogy of memoirs. The first, Bo...
Playing off the title of the famous essay by Frederick Jackson Turner, this volume of essays and com...
Some of today\u27s best writing is by Native American authors. That fact is not as widely known as i...
The seventeen essays in this volume are intended, as Michael Malone says, to describe what has been...
D\u27Arcy McNickle is best known for his ethnohistorical works, They Came Here First (1949), Indians...
Susan Miller and James Riding In position this anthology as the first to collect historical work fro...
Patricia Loughlin has written an excellent work about three female scholars specializing in Native s...
Much contemporary western writing, including memoirs such as Judy Blunt\u27s Breaking Clean (2003), ...
In the North American Review for 1815, Walter Channing suggested that America could compensate for i...
In these essays, originally published in the New York Review of Books, Larry McMurtry examines Weste...
This remarkable collection of essays offers something for every reader interested in Montana literat...
West of 98 is an ambitious and comprehensive collection of personal essays and poems by over sixty c...
In his recent travel book, Roads: Driving America\u27s Great Highways, Larry McMurtry declares himse...
From time to time, a serious book excites the imaginations of a vaster public than the audience of s...
Montana Legacy is a sequel to the well-received 1992 anthology, The Montana Heritage. Like its prede...
Literary Life is the second entry of Larry McMurtry\u27s projected trilogy of memoirs. The first, Bo...
Playing off the title of the famous essay by Frederick Jackson Turner, this volume of essays and com...
Some of today\u27s best writing is by Native American authors. That fact is not as widely known as i...
The seventeen essays in this volume are intended, as Michael Malone says, to describe what has been...
D\u27Arcy McNickle is best known for his ethnohistorical works, They Came Here First (1949), Indians...
Susan Miller and James Riding In position this anthology as the first to collect historical work fro...
Patricia Loughlin has written an excellent work about three female scholars specializing in Native s...
Much contemporary western writing, including memoirs such as Judy Blunt\u27s Breaking Clean (2003), ...
In the North American Review for 1815, Walter Channing suggested that America could compensate for i...