This lavishly illustrated volume reassesses and celebrates the life and legacy of the West’s most legendary figure, George Armstrong Custer, from “one of America’s great storytellers” ( The Wall Street Journal ).
On June 25, 1876, General George Armstrong Custer and his 7th Cavalry attacked a large Lakota Cheyenne village on the Little Bighorn River in Montana Territory. He lost not only the battle but his life—and the lives of his entire cavalry. “Custer’s Last Stand” was a spectacular defeat that shocked the country and grew quickly into a legend that has reverberated in our national consciousness to this day.
In this lavishly illustrated volume, Larry McMurtry, the greatest chronicler of the American West, tackles for the first time the “Boy General” and his rightful place in history. Custer is an expansive, agile, and clear-eyed reassessment of the iconic general’s life and legacy—how the legend was born, the ways in which it evolved, what it has meant—told against the broad sweep of the American narrative. It is a magisterial portrait of a complicated, misunderstood man that not only irrevocably changes our long-standing conversation about Custer, but once again redefines our understanding of the American West.
Larry Jeff McMurtry was an American novelist, essayist, and screenwriter whose work was predominantly set in either the Old West or contemporary Texas. His novels included Horseman, Pass By (1962), The Last Picture Show (1966), and Terms of Endearment (1975), which were adapted into films. Films adapted from McMurtry's works earned 34 Oscar nominations (13 wins). He was also a prominent book collector and bookseller. His 1985 Pulitzer Prize-winning novel Lonesome Dove was adapted into a television miniseries that earned 18 Emmy Award nominations (seven wins). The subsequent three novels in his Lonesome Dove series were adapted as three more miniseries, earning eight more Emmy nominations. McMurtry and co-writer Diana Ossana adapted the screenplay for Brokeback Mountain (2005), which earned eight Academy Award nominations with three wins, including McMurtry and Ossana for Best Adapted Screenplay. In 2014, McMurtry received the National Humanities Medal. In Tracy Daugherty's 2023 biography of McMurtry, the biographer quotes critic Dave Hickey as saying about McMurtry: "Larry is a writer, and it's kind of like being a critter. If you leave a cow alone, he'll eat grass. If you leave Larry alone, he'll write books. When he's in public, he may say hello and goodbye, but otherwise he is just resting, getting ready to go write."
Most readers know Larry McMurtry as a fine writer of fiction, but fewer people know he is a master of the short biography. "Crazy Horse" is an example of such a biography. "Custer" isn't. Which is not to say that "Custer" is without its virtues and pleasures.
"Custer" is a sumptuous coffee table book, full of a score of pictures of the Colonel and Mrs. Custer, and--even better--at least two score photographs of Native Americans--most of them involved in this great final victory of the unwinnable war against the U.S. Reading between the lines, I get the feeling that McMurtry, who believes the definitive work on Custer has already been done, and who is aware of how much (and how little) the ideal coffee table book requires, decided to indulge himself, rambling on like a seasoned docent at a small, well-endowed museum, spinning great yarns which illuminate the exhibits and while stilll taking the liberty of to face his desultory delivery with a tangentially relevant anecdote from time to time.
All this is very much okay with me. Even the "irrelevant" anecdotes are more relevant than they first appear: it's just that McMurtry lets you be smart and connect the dots yourself.
Once you have completed this brief but leisurely trip through the Little Big Horn Photographic Museum, you will find that you have seen more than a few good pictures and learned more than a few good things from a knowledgeable guide.
You don't have to be much of a salesperson to sell me a book on Custer or the fight at Little Big Horn, so when I saw this offering by Larry McMurtry I had my wallet out pretty darn quick. After all, McMurtry had penned Lonesome Dove , one of the best darn westerns ever. I soon found out that being a capable writer of fiction doesn't necessarily make one a capable biographer. I got the impression that he was thinking:
"I'm Larry McMurtry and I have a zillion books in print so I really don't have to make any effort to write anything good or even coherent. I'll just fill a book with pictures and fools will buy it because It has my name on it. Hell, I won't even hire a proofreader or verify any of the information I'm putting forth as fact". The following are a couple of examples of the literary gems the unsuspecting buyer will encounter:
P.27: " And Custer's dash and flare (sic) were genuine, besides which they made the generals look good, Sheridan particularly." ; and
P.42: " The Indians came by the thousands, riding their best horses and all their finery, in the way of bear claws and eagle feathers.
I could go on and on...Mr McMurtry did. Another thing that rankles is an image on page 36, which McMurtry identifies as being an image of Custer with his horse, Comanche. (I wish I knew how to insert images here). The photo is clearly a photo of the farrier, Gustave Korn, although the horse is actually Comanche. Comanche was in fact the property of Myles Keough. Maybe this isn't the biggest deal in the world, but if you err on that point your other "facts" are suspect, in my opinion.
In short, I found this short life of Custer to be a rambling and disjointed affair. The only reason I gave it 3 stars is that the book is resplendent with photographs and illustrations which offset the sloppy writing and lacklustre proofreading.
On June 26, 1876, General George Custer led about 264 soldiers of the Seventh Cavalry into massacre by a combined force of plains Indians at the Battle of Little Bighorn. The Battle and Custer quickly became legendary. Many books have been written from varied perspectives about Custer, Little Bighorn, and the United States' Westward expansion.
Released in early November, 2012, Larry McMurtry's "Custer" is among the most recent studies of an endlessly fascinating subject. McMurtry is a prolific novelist and writer on the American West. His longstanding familiarity and writing about the West and his love for the subject are themselves enough to make his thoughts about Custer of interest. His book on Custer does not purport to be definitive or particularly original. To the contrary, McMurtry several times commends to interested readers the detailed Custer studies by Robert Utley, James Donovan, Nathaniel Philbrick and, in particular Evan Connell. "Son of the Morning Star: Custer and The Little Bighorn". In his book, McMurtry expresses a preference for short biographies, along the line of his own earlier biography of Crazy Horse for the reason that they force most readers and writers to come to the heart of their subjects.
McMurtry's book is a coffee-table work of about 175 pages rather than a full scholarly account. It is a mixture of history and meditation, as is Connell's book on a much larger scale. For an event which has become iconic, such as Little Bighorn, writing tends to flow between the battle and its background, how the battle has been viewed by others over time, and the views of the author. This is emphatically the case with McMurtry's book.
The text of the book is spare, colloquial and for the most part eloquent. There are typographical errors, small inconsistencies, and some awkward grammatical contsrtuctions which are irritating. The larger portion of the book is devoted to paintings, photographs, and memorabilia of Custer and his era. They include popular prints, paintings by Catlin, Remington, Indian artists and much more. There are occasional errors in identifying the illustrations. The illustrations McMurtry has assembled for the book are difficult to find in one place. Some will be familiar to many readers while others are rare. They greatly enhance the value of the book.
There are those who argue that Custer and Little Bighorn receive too much attention. McMurtry disagrees. Throughout this book, he stresses the importance of the battle and its pivotal role in the settlement of the American West. Tragic and enigmatic, Custer and Little Bighorn deserve the attention they have received from historians and from the public.
McMurtry does not offer a linear narrative. His story tends to wander and he follows his thoughts. He offers fresh comparisons between Custer and the earlier explorer, soldier, and presidential candidate Fremont. He offers portrayals of leading characters who played roles on the American frontier, including Grant, Sherman, Sheridan, Hancock, Sitting Bull, Crazy Horse, Red Cloud, Black Elk, and more. The discussion of the Battle of Little Bighorn and of predecessor battles are brief. With all the illustrations, the book would have benefited from a detailed map of the Little Bighorn fight, showing lines of approach, Custer's divisions of his troops, the approach of the Indians, and the like.
When I wrote this review, "Custer" had been released for less than one month, and sparked many reader reviews. The reviews, in their number and content, show the interest and passion which Custer continues to inspire. Many of the reader reviews are written by individuals who obviously know and care a great deal about the facts of the battle. These reviews tend to point out the shortness of McMurtry's account, the factual errors and inconsistencies, and the sometimes sloppy editing that I mentioned above.
I found the book moving. The text, illustrations, and reflections made me think about Custer and Little Bighorn and their significance. They brought home a sense of American history and drive together with tragedy. The book gave me an overview of Custer's story, the West, and the different, seemingly conflicting ways of understanding it. The errors of the book, for most lay readers, will not appreciably detract from the presentation. McMurtry's goal was to present a short, distilled, thoughtful account of Custer and Little Bighorn. For the most part, I think he succeeds. The book offers many sources, including the four authors named above, for readers who want to learn more.
The reader reviews of this book and their different perspectives helped me think about what I found valuable in McMurtry's account and about why I found reading the book and thinking about the illustrations worthwhile.
I haven't been a huge fan of biographies, but I love Larry McMurtry and he does a wonderful job. Shows you the brutality of both sides without being too graphic or too bogged down with dates.
One of my favorite westerns was Lonesome Dove by Larry McMurtry. While I experienced this book in audio format, it was just a wonderful saga of the old West and as I recall McMurtry won a Pulitzer prize for the effort. It was with these thoughts in mind that this week with great anticipation I purchased a copy of "Custer" by Larry McMurtry. I made a mistake.
I want to provide a full paragraph quote from "Custer". This is the last paragraph in Chapter Four.
"Which man had the sadder lot is not easy to say. Custer's life was abruptly snuffed out by two Sioux or Cheyenne bullets. Almost every venture Fremont undertook failed. He philandered endlessly--Jesse grew fat and sad. He died while doing a friend a favor--he brought some flowers and placed them on a grave in Brooklyn. The grave was the friend of a friend. He would have done better to have stuck to his first love, topography; he had a real aptitude for landscapes. But, as a mere mapmaker, could he have attracted Jesse? He tried for glory and found a little bit of it."
The quoted paragraph follows a paragraph of similar length devoted to Custer, which followed a paragraph about Fremont (a military man mentioned earlier in the chapter) with one reference to "Jesse", who was Fremont's wife (mentioned in a still earlier paragraph).
The paragraph I quote is an attempt at a concluding paragraph comparing Custer and Fremont. But what a sad, disjointed effort it is! I conclude from this paragraph and others like it throughout the book that McMurtry followed one of two possible routines in writing it--either he wrote it off the top of his head, or he pulled slips of paper from a hat, and copied the results of the drawing into whatever paragraph he happened to be writing at the moment.
I was so disappointed in this weak effort by a great writer that I am debating asking for a refund. Could this work be a reflection of an immediate need for some quick cash? If not, I hate he got any of mine this week.
"Custer" is a well illustrated but badly written book. I don't mean that McMurtry is ungrammatical, or that he is unknowlegeable, but that he has produced an ill-organized and inadequately conceived book. Individual sentences make sense, more or less, but they are not connected to the sentences around them in any meaningful way. The same is true of phrases, paragraphs, and chapters. You could change their order any way you wanted to and the effects of the change wouldn't decrease the book's clarity. Take the comparison that he makes between Custer and John C. Fremont. First, the points of comparison are only very broadly connected; second, the point of the comparison is both understated and leads nowhere. Take the account of Ranald Mackenzie's madness. Take the absence of any strategic and tactical explanations of Custer's failings as a commander.
McMurtry takes somewhat snide potshots at writers like Robert Utley, Nathanie Philbrick, and James Donovan for having deeply immersed themselves in the details of what happened at the Little Big Horn, then provides an unbroken string of facts that don't relate either to each other or to a bigger picture. Several years ago, McMurtry produced a somewhat similar book about frontier massacres, one of them the Little Big Horn. It had a bit more cohesion than this book, but it made clear that a true understanding of the frontier experience would come from the work of other writers.
Okay so I didn't abandon it but......this book sucked donkey balls. First of all, what is wrong with publishing these days? No one can afford a good proofreader or editor? Crazy. And why did McMurtry write this? His greed, his publishers' greed? He clearly didn't like Custer or his wife and put the most negative, simplistic spin on nearly every chapter of this man's life. No balance was attempted nor accuracy, nuance.
I almost got out a notebook to write page numbers and mistakes down. In the first 50 pages, he gets so many things wrong. Basic history - Custer was courtmartialed before the Battle of the Washita, not after. It's not true that all of his officers hated him, like many in the military - he had his clique. Which brings me to my next point - 2 brothers, a nephew and a brother-in-law were killed with him, not a stepbrother! And Comanche was Capt. Keogh's horse, NOT Custer's, and on and on. Well-known facts were just bungled and the typos accumulated. Depressing. What's the point.
On a positive note, the pictures are good, even if Libbie Custer was misidentified in one. She was seen in a rare photo of her wedding gown, a far more beautiful creation than many of the monstrosities one sees at Brides R, no wait, David's Bridal. I guess someone has to mass produce wedding gowns that will someday be part of the 50% divorce rate. ;) Come to think of it, mass production has become the scourge of our times.
I listened to this as an audiobook, but apparently it is also a gorgeous coffee table book. (See Bill's review here: https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...) It was great as audio, although it would have been nice to see the pictures.
McMurtry did a good, quick sketch of Custer & the events that led to & followed the battle of Little Big Horn. There was more from the Indian point of view than is normal plus a good balanced account of the man himself. Highly recommended.
This is a terrible book. The pictures are nice, but the text is disjointed and ungrammatical, and it's obvious that no editor or proofreader ever got anywhere near it. Chapters are thrown together willy nilly, with succeeding paragraphs having nothing to do with each other. The author repeats himself all over the place to no effect, and his few attempts to be clever are groan-worthy at best. At last, on page 106, he abdicates all responsibility for saying anything new or interesting about Custer's Last Stand, deferring to four other books on the subject. Had I known he was going to do that, I never would have picked this one up.
Custer....not my favorite person in history. Actually, I have pretty negative feelings about him. This short book was about all I could handle in a biography of the man. I just find him annoying so I’d rather read of something/someone more fascinating. McMutry did an adequate and (most importantly) brief synopsis of the General’s life. I feel a real Western history reader wouldn’t appreciate the vague overview that this book provided.
Custer was a dick who got those, including his own brothers/nephew killed with him on that fated Montana hillside. Myth says he died with a smile on his face, or a death rictus more like. This book contains some excellent period photos and depiction paintings.
It was good to have so many great photos all in one place. I particularly liked those of the wagon train on p 89, those of Custer and his wife Libby pp. 78-83, Custer in his study p. 88 and the many photos and paintings of the Indians and their leaders. The final photos of and about Wild Bill Cody seem to be an afterthought.
I don’t read many coffee table books (not many people do), or pick them up (which many people do), but this one caught my eye. I wondered what Larry McMurtry’s take on Custer might be. If it has a slant, it is how irresponsible Custer was as a general, how he showed lack of concern for his men, how he was hated by other officers (and President Grant), and how he relied on his intuition (in the face of facts and good advice), which sent him and his entire regiment to their deaths.
While the narrative is chronological, it rambles. It’s like your favorite uncle showing you a picture collection and stringing together anecdotes about them. Like other books of this format, there are no footnotes.
The photos are wonderful. The text is OK. How do you rate a coffee table book? If you want a book of Custer photos, this in a 5 star book for you. If you want an over lightly on Custer, this beats Wikipedia. If you’re looking for more, as McMurtry notes, there are literally hundreds of other volumes to choose from.
OK, this was a long way from being my favorite McMurtry. Obviously, fiction is his strong suit. However, I think some of our fellow Goodreads participants need to chill out and THINK for a second before writing a review. Some of the reviews were scathing, characterizing the book as worthless, historically inaccurate or incomplete and so on ad nauseum. First of all, this is a coffe table book for God's sake. If you want the detailed, complete story find one of the many good volumes that has been wriien on the subject in recent years. McMurtry, understaning that he has not written a history, even recommends four very good ones. Next, sure, there were errors, some of which may have been McMurtry's but the majority I would attribute to the fact that books today are by and large poorly edited and proof read. I almost never pick up a book without these kinds of errors and the frequency is increasing. This book contained some new information (and I've read three of the for books he recommended, plus others, so I know something about the topic) but most interestingly there were a number of illustrations that I had not seen before - not a bad thing for a coffee table book. If you have an interest in the subject this book is worth looking at.
This book was shockingly disappointing--truly bad, to the point where it helps me better appreciate other books. But first, a few positives: I listened to this on audiobook, and the chapters are very short, which made for easy listening. Also, the reader was very good. Second, the printed volume (I checked that out from my library as well) contained a lot of interesting pictures and paintings--well worth perusing but not owning.
What made this book so bad was its simplistic and roundabout analysis of issues. There was so much repetition--and in such a short book! McMurty would reference something, only to mention it again later, adding simply one more detail. The organization was scattered and unsystematic; the analysis lacked depth and insight. McMurty does have an amusing, folksy was of writing, but a little more sophistication of discussion would be appreciated. What a frustrating read...
I’m a huge fan of Larry McMurtry, viewing the Lonesome Dove series as some of the best literature in the world. I’ve also greatly enjoyed the Last Picture Show series. Before starting the Terms of Endearment series, I figured I’d give this nonfiction Custer book a chance. It turned out to be a real riot, like some sort of bizarre satire. Larry McMurtry writing a biography of Custer is like Alexander Dumas writing a biography of Napoleon. As I read the book, I couldn’t help but feel McMurtry was channeling his inner Mark Twain. I highly recommend, if you read this short book, not to take it too seriously. I can’t imagine it was meant to be viewed that way. As a fun little extra, McMurtry managed to work the phrase “Terms of Endearment” into the text during the last few chapters.
Easy listen and good quick biography on Gen George Custer. Nice primer of the Indian Wars and Wild West. Author noted several times that USA broke exactly every treaty made with the Indians (in the hundreds). No need to read lengthy biographies on Custer. This book gives you all you need to know about Custer. For more depth one can always dive into the many books on US history, Civil War, Homesteads, US westward expansion. Custer famously graduated precisely the bottom of his west point class (someone has to). He looked at warfare as sport and had almost a sociopathic ego that like all egoists lead to his demise. Despite repeated warnings of Indians at Little Big Horn, Custer's hubris took him straight into an ambush where 5 of the 7th Cavalry's twelve companies were wiped out and Custer was killed, as were two of his brothers, a nephew, and a brother-in-law. Good pictures in the book.
"Custer" is a quick historical non-fiction book and a fantastic primer of the Wild West! It will make you interested in reading more on this era of American History (it did for me).
The value here is in the photos & art. There is a lot of that, all apropos, regarding the eponymous figurehead he's expounding on. Although "expounding" may not be the right word...this is a "short life", or an abbreviated bio--as opposed to the thick & thorough juggernaut tomes of TMI which larger-than-life real-world characters often attract. In this case, it was more about chiming in. McMurtry, an author whose career may be arcing to a close, given his age and voluminous output, and self-revealed exhaustion with his own literary voice. This isn't a bad book, nor is it a great book. It seems to be a quick comment, in & out, aimed to say out loud what the avid McMurtry reader has already guessed: Custer was no hero at the Little Big Horn. He was impulsive, solipsistic & not a little reckless. Bringing some 264 men to their deaths, including a handful of kin relation.
And while this is all true, the significance of this event is also laid out in other terms: the closing of the American frontier. The final huzzah of native defiance, sheer numbers overwhelming the technologically advanced white man. If I'm being honest, I was hoping for more, perhaps more engaging or witty (the jacket regards it as "enthralling"). A good summary of the life of Custer, who he was, what he did. And the author points us to other research should we desire all that detail, the nuances of research minutae.
A great summation of Custer, for the curious. The pictures and artwork give us a visual. Overall, a worthwhile read, for those of us who know the name, and maybe the general story, but want to be better informed. Very readable. Short chapters, conversational tones, a tad dry & sarcastic in places, which lifts us beyond a mere historian's perspective.
Did you watch the movie "Night at the Museum 2" and think they were exaggerating the Custer part to be funny? After reading Larry McMurtry's Custer on adobe reader, I have to say, I kept thinking of that movie the entire time. McMurtry is a wonderful writer. He is colorful, not-too-detailed, and he is funny. Who knew history good be so amusing? And remember, I am talking about a slaughter, so that says alot.
McMurty starts at the beginning of Custer's career and works his way to the end, even past it, including his wife's mission to save his reputation. He includes general history of the time, the Indians, and war tactics of the time. It isn't told like "this happened and than this happened and than this happened." He tells it more like a narration. The book also includes a lot of illustrations and pictures. It is a short book and perfect for someone who would like to learn more about history with as little effort as possible. Highly recommended.
Larry McMurtry's "short biography" of Custer doesn't really cover any new ground. It contains lots of anecdotes and some damned fine stories.
If you want an in-depth read of Little Big Horn and Custer, look elsewhere (start with Nathaneal Philbrick). But if you want a quick look at Custer (probably a bit lacking on the Civil War side), pick up McMurtry.
And it's a great read if you're trying for four books in four days...
Custer, by Larry McMurtry, promises to bring the complexity of George Armstrong Custer to life by illuminating his difficult marriage and his glory-seeking in an assessment of Custer’s fame and the power of his personality while redefining the common understanding of the American West. This title is published by Simon & Schuster, ISBN: 978-1-4516-2622-3 as an ebook.
The author begins by explaining that his work will cut through much of the irrelevant guesswork that is common in most of the writing on Custer. For example, he seriously questions the necessity of discussing why one corpse was found with 150 arrows in it. It’s irrelevant, he argues. However, in chapter 30, the author expressly raises that very question. After considering CPT Tom Custer’s death, the author is puzzled as to why 105 arrows were found in a body and that this fact should really fascinate “students of mutilation”.
The narrative then launches into a lengthy comparison of Fremont, a man who was once employed as a topographer. This rather long section seems to be more of a set up for character assassination than it does with serious historical engagement. The reader is informed that Custer abandoned his men, like Fremont. Custer was court-martialed, like Fremont. Custer wanted to be president, like Fremont. Fremont is not relevant to the purpose of the book.
Many of the illustrations are carelessly mislabeled. Most of the photographs have no contextual significance. One picture bears the text “Custer with his horse, Comanche” yet it is not a picture of Custer (it’s Gustav Korn) and it’s not Custer’s horse (it belonged to CPT Keogh). The picture itself was taken long after the battle anyway. Another picture is described as being Custer and the scout Curly in 1876. It isn’t. It is a picture of the scouts Goose and Bloody Knife with Custer in 1874. Lastly, a photo of “Custer and Little Wolf” is actually a photo of C. Lyon Berg taken in 1908. Incidentally Charles L. Von Berg was a known “Custer battle impostor” who claimed that he was the inspiration for Buffalo Bill Cody’s Western tales. Why are those pictures placed in those chapters? What is the relevance? There needs to be some fact checking before Simon & Schuster unleashes this inaccurate study on the public.
Other examples of areas that need work are where the author claims General Custer wrote the famous last message, carried by John Martin, to Benteen. He even provides a picture of it with the actual signature, not by Custer, but by the real person who wrote the note, and the historical record bears this out, of Lt. Cooke who was Custer’s adjutant. Another is that this book claims Private Thomas Coleman was the first Soldier to arrive on the battlefield after the defeat. But this is far from true. LT Roe was the first US Soldier to see the carnage from a distance. LT Bradley, from Terry’s command, was the first physically on the battlefield, even performing the first body count before reporting the fate of the 7th Cavalry back to General Terry. Details matter. It is careless to go to print without diligent research. This book is not a reflection of serious study.
Overall, I did not find any of this title’s claims to be borne out in the text. I did not find scholarly participation with the subject. Much of what I read was conjecture or inspired by rumor. The errors struck me as minor at first--surely no historian can get every detail right¬--but error compounded error so much that I was overwhelmed by the careless mistakes.
I do not believe this is a good introduction to the subject of Custer and the Little Bighorn battle. It does nothing to contribute to the works already available. It does not meet a single of its intended purposes. It holds no content that is new or revealing about the topic.
Almost as if the author knew the work was faulty are the final statements appearing after the bibliography where the author accuses most Custer historians of being “peculiar” and “cranky.” Perhaps it is good to listen to cranky, peculiar scholars from time to time in order to avoid academic embarrassment.
Ambush! The alleged Indian fighter Custer may not have been scalped but I feel I was after stumbling and staggering through the pages of Larry McMurtry’s meagre biography of the controversial seventh cavalry commander. Furthermore, I came to realize that wasn’t the only wound I suffered in the process: I noticed a big hole in my wallet too. McMurtry’s “Custer” is awful.
Like Custer, I never saw this coming. And why would I? Who could possibly have thought that McMurtry, the doyen of writers on the West, the Pulitzer prize-winning author of the sublime Lonesome Dove, could produce a turkey like this? A little while ago I would have thought him constitutionally incapable of such banality.
There is nothing new here and, even more damningly, little of interest. Ostensibly this is a pick-me-up-and-browse “Coffee Table” book: lots of nice pictures - albeit ones that have done the rounds many, many times before – padded out with personal observations and tangential ramblings loosely centring on the long-haired general of the plains. The trouble is there is no sense of coherence, or even effort, in the whole project. “Chapter” 23 is, perhaps, the most striking encapsulation of the book’s failings. It is a disjointed, often irrelevant, and bewildering collection facts and musings that is almost incomprehensible. He begins with a paragraph on his and his partner’s award for services to the West before swinging abruptly to a mini discourse on McKenzie, another army general in the Indian wars, without any introduction or attempt at a segue showing the connection between the two quite unrelated subjects. Who the hell is McKenzie? Then, equally suddenly, he switches to Custer. The reader might as well be picking disparate trivia cards out of a box.
I can only wonder who made the pitch for this enterprise; was it McMurtry himself or his publisher maybe? It could well have gone along the lines, “Hey, here’s an idea to pocket some easy cash. Throw a bunch of Custer pictures on the table and then give us a couple of your thoughts to fill in some spaces. You know, nothing too taxing, top of your head stuff will do. We’ll let the pics. do the talking.”
McMurtry does say at one point that anyone wanting a detailed account of Custer at Little Bighorn should read Connell’s “Son of the Morning Star.” He’s right there.
"Custer" is a well-illustrated and very brief "life and times" of General George Armstrong Custer, written by Larry McMurtry of "Lonesome Dove" fame. It's interesting in spots and engaging in its own way, but it rambles with a vengeance. The narrative wanders all over the 19th Century American West, touching on some aspect of Custer's life, then digressing to a quick and inconclusive "parallel life" of John C. Fremont, then a brief excursion into Custer's marriage to his wife, Libby, then to the "Battle" of Washita, then a quick aside about some aspect of the Last Stand, then on to Buffalo Bill Cody's Wild West Show, then a quick discussion of Sitting Bull, Crazy Horse and other Native American leaders, and then--well, you get the idea. And beyond the rambling, the narrative is internally disjointed--some paragraphs and sentences come out of nowhere, having little or nothing to do with what came before or after. My favorite was a throw away reference to Churchill's dismissal of Auchinleck during World War 2--I suppose that might have something to do with 19th Century American military decisions, but the point of the reference is by no means clear.
This is not to say that the book isn't somewhat interesting--I read it in a couple of sittings, and it includes a lot of well-rendered period photographs of the main characters, as well as full-color presentations of various paintings (mostly of the Last Stand), as well as posters from Buffalo Bill's Wild West show. Reading the book is a little like listening to an interesting and amusing uncle give a stream of consciousness explanation of what he knows about George A. Custer and the American West in the 19th Century, complete with photos (presented via PowerPoint).
If you already know something about George A. Custer and the post-Civil War American West, "Custer" is a briefly diverting gloss with lovely pictures. If you are looking for a detailed narrative history that systematically explores Custer's life, the Battle of The Little Bighorn, or the 19th Century campaigns against Native Americans, then (as McMurtry himself cheerfully notes) there are a number of other excellent and in depth books on the subject.
In the years after the Civil War my great-great-grandfather, a Union soldier, went AWOL from the Army in Kansas. An old letter from his daughter says that he was having trouble with a superior officer, and one of them was going to kill the other unless my great-great-grandfather took off. General George A. Custer was in Kansas at the same time, and I’ve always wondered if maybe he was the superior officer mentioned in the letter. I can easily believe that an ancestor of mine could become frustrated with a difficult leader, and Larry McMurtry’s “short life” of Custer shows how the general wasn’t very well liked among those with whom he served.
McMurtry’s Custer is a character sketch and personal reflection on the high and low points of the general’s career. McMurtry, one of my favorite authors, doesn’t attempt to cover every aspect of Custer’s life. In addition to McMurtry’s story-telling, I especially enjoyed the descriptions and photos of the Indian leaders of the time.
Although I learned a few things about Custer, nothing here shed new light on my great-great-grandfather, except maybe this tantalizing detail: “If Custer signally lacked something it was what the rest of the world calls conscience. He had no capacity for empathizing with the pain and suffering of others … Conditions being what they were, desertion was a constant problem, both in Texas or Kansas, sometimes running as high as 50 percent. Custer treated the deserters savagely, often sending his brother Tom to shoot them. Those who made it back to the forts faced cruel punishment.”
Larry McMurtry’s Custer includes lots of graphics, and that’s good. The text itself is choppy, consisting of short chapters sometimes chronological and sometimes not. The effect is to make the read uneven, as if the text had been put together by someone with ADD. It’s clear from the outset that McMurtry does not like Custer. Just about everything negative that could be said about the guy is included. The author does make some good points along the way. The 1876 debacle at the Little Big Horn “closed the narrative of American settlement.” The multitude of languages on the Plains complicated relations among whites and the various tribes. A cluster of factors explain the fascination with Custer. In the end this is not a volume that will settle any questions about Custer or his place in history. It is not, as one advertisement put it, the last word on the ill-fated soldier. The graphics, however, are well done and provide a convenient way to see many of pictures of Custer, Indians and such things as Buffalo Bill Wildwest show circulars.
I didn't know how to rate this book because it's the first book on Custer that I've ever read. I liked the historical notes and swift story-telling that unfolds. I little jumpy - here and there about people and places. Causes a lapse in some of the time and events, but overall, a great story of the West. The book was given to my by my father-in-law, Mac. He is a Vietnam veteran and absolutely loves Custer. He has the Last Stand poster in his office at well as Custer's famous portrait in hat. I have to ask him why he admires him so. As for me I don't like the fact that he just couldn't leave the Indians alone. I respect the Natives more than anything and find it hard to respect Custer at all. I think Mac likes him so much for his temerity. To me, he is overly-confident which is never a good thing and did a lot of wrong things for the wrong reasons. Most of the westward expansion was all done through ignorance, in my opinion. But still there's nothing better to me than a good ol' western story. I'm glad I've read this book.
A glorious literary career has come to this. Though it isn't a comeback as Larry has never stopped writing, Sugar Ray Leonard had more late career success. Somewhere around Dwayne's Depressed or the last of the BerryBender Chronicles, McMurtry ceased to be the writer he once was. There are some impressive pictures in this handsome volume, but the journalism is sloppy, unoriginal, and downright adolescent. I'm not entirely convinced he didn't find an intern who over-utilized wikipedia to produce this glorified middle school history essay.
As Mr. McMurtry terms it, it is a "short read" on Custer. It is enough to "wet the appetite" without boring. It made me want to get into some of the other books recommended, although I think I've got enough on Custer for now. I just appreciate the glimpse into this time in history. McMurtry makes the history interested in a very familiar style and certainly doesn't glamorize General Custer. I recommend this book especially since you will invest very little time. The audio version is very easy to listen to and the reader seems to capture McMurtry style perfectly.
Not great - though an easy run through of Custer's personal career set against the bigger historical events and trends from the Civil War through western migration and development of railroad and gold rush in Black Hills. As others have noted, it is so easy to find detail errors that almost nothing in this book can be counted on 100%. Lots of personal impressions from McMurtry and lots of filler too. It's pretty much a Custer picture book.