I really like Edward Abbey, for both his environmental politics and his formidable writing on the American West, fiction and nonfiction alike. The Brave Cowboy is perhaps my favorite Abbey novel (The Monkey Wrench Gang is right up there and a few others are close). It’s the story, as its subtitle (“An Old Tale in a New Time”) suggests, of a cowboy’s (mis)adventures in the modern world, a world in which he is terribly out of place. Put more generally, it’s the novel of the clash between the Old West and the New West, of the West’s cultural imaginary of fierce independence and individualism versus the corporate greed and power that has transformed the region.
The hero of the novel is Jack Burns, an itinerant cowboy, who rides into the city to help an old friend, Paul Bondi, who has been jailed for refusing to register for the draft. Jack’s plan is to get himself arrested so he and Paul can then escape together. Things don’t go quite as planned, as once in jail Jack finds Paul resistant to following him; as they wrangle about the escape, they engage in an extensive dialogue on the nature of freedom, the authority of law, and the power of government to control lives. Some might find their discussions a bit tedious; I found them invigorating and challenging. A central matter of dispute emerges: which is more important, one’s ideals or one’s loved ones? Which deserves one's highest priority and commitment?
Once the escape goes awry (that’s all I’ll say about it), the novel becomes one of escape, with Jack and his horse pursued, and pursued with a vengeance, by a whole slew of authorities, including the military zooming in in helicopters armed with automatic weapons. It’s David vs. Goliath, the lone anarchist vs. the overwhelming powers of the State. It’s breathtakingly exciting.
Abbey’s prose, as always, is clean and crisp, and he’s particularly effective at capturing the stark beauty of the Western landscape as well as at invoking the psychological pull we all have felt toward pursuing less complex lives defined by easily recognized virtues, such as independence, honor, and loyalty.