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Leaving Cheyenne
by Larry McMurtry, first pub. 1962, over 300 pages.
OVERVIEW: "[McMurtry's]...second novel about love and loss on the great plains of Texas. From 1920’s ranching to range cowboys and WWII grief [and concluding in the early 1960s], McMurtry is the undisputed father of the Western literary epic.
Leaving Cheyenne traces the loves of three West Texas characters as they follow that sundown trail: Gideon Fry [aka "Gid"], the serious rancher; Johnny McCloud, the free-spirited cowhand; and Molly Taylor, the sensitive woman they both love and who bears them each a son [Jimmy & Joe]. Told...[from 3 different] perspectives over...[a period of about 40] years...[and] follows their dreams, secrets, and grief against a changing American landscape."
The time frame mostly covers the 40 years from 1922 to 1962 and the 3 main characters are in their twenties to start and end up in there sixties.
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As the tale begins Gid is narrating, telling his story. Gid & his pal Johnny are both vying for Molly's attention and love. At this point we're not told the age of these 3 compadres, but they act like teenagers. Actually they're out of school and are supposed to be twenty-somethings. Gid is employed and well paid by his rancher dad and he's suppose to be learning all the tasks of ranching so he can take it over one day. Dad insists that all jobs are important on the road to wealth, to not being poor or mediocre.
Johnny's family is mostly mediocre, but he does still have his mother, unlike Gideon. Johnny considers himself a cowboy and he's a good one. Farm work, harvesting "oatschock," working as a "clodhopper" are beneath Johnny. Gid also does not enjoy eating dust behind the plow mule, but he mostly does the jobs assigned him. To do some real cowboying, Johnny heads north into the Texas Panhandle to work on one of the big ranches up there. With Johnny away it's a good opportunity for courting the raven-haired beauty, Molly.
There's also a bit of a mystery. A while ago, with Johnny's help, Gideon had disappeared for a couple of months to a Kansas hospital for unspecified reasons. In thanks Gid had a pricey saddle made for his pal. Dad mentions that it's a finer saddle then any he's ever owned. Later we learn the problem involved a brothal and Gid getting cured.
That vagueness is the way the author presents most scenes involving intimacy and trysts--even a visit to a house of ill repute. One example: Molly kisses Gid in her bedroom and says, "don't you say another word tonight." In the very next scene Gid awakes in the morning expecting to find his dad telling him to get up. "But there was just Molly; she was lovely." That's it, that's typical for a "spicy" segment. In his later works author McMurtry started writing much more explicit scenes.
On a wonderful date with Molly, fishing and lounging in the grass under the shade trees, Gid proposes marriage. Unfortunately Molly has no intention of getting married to anyone. If she ended up having a baby she might have to get married, but she makes it clear she wouldn't want to. "...I ain't going to marry, I mean it. I'll do anything you want me to but that. I'll do everything else if you want..." Gid has his heart set on Molly as his wife and declines the offer of "everything else." Much later he regrets that decision, knowing that Johnny wouldn't have thought twice about it, he would have just done it.
The pals can't figure out what Molly sees in that shiftless, oilpatch roughneck named Eddie White. And Molly tells Gid she won't be going to anymore holiday dances with him since she just promised them all to Eddie (What? Is she crazy?). Both Molly and Gid's fathers end up killing themselves: her drunken dad drank a bottle of poison by mistake, but Mr. Fry's ailment kept getting worse so he ended it with the rifle. That left Molly living alone on the family farm which borders the Fry's ranch and Gideon Fry is also alone, the sole owner-occupant of his 10,000 acre ranch.
Then Molly, loved and doted on by Gid and she very affectionate in return, unbelievably up and marries Eddie without a word to anyone (Yeh, she's crazy). Gid of course is devastated. He "wasn't no solitary owl" and being especially lonely, Gid decides he may as well propose to Mabel Peters who's often asked him to marry her. They've always gotten along and Mabel is the "best girl left in the county." Once they're married Gid thinks he made a mistake, she's bossy, they're not in love, but he trys to get along.
Eventually Gid does pay Molly a visit (Eddie's away at the oil fields as usual). She tells Gid she's ready for a baby and wants him as the daddy. She convinces Gid all she wants is his love, "just you loving me...And nothing else." As for Eddie she says, "He ain't the married kind" (he's not a homebody) and she doesn't believe he'd be a good dad. And so begins Gid and Molly's weekly affair and keeping their spouses in the dark. Before long Molly's preggers. Gid doesn't believe in divorce, so when Molly eventually offers to marry him, if he'll just dump Mabel, he won't do it. Their affair continues--Gid suffering with a guilt-ridden conscience.
Johnny is back in the area and Gid hires his pal to help work the ranch and live in the bunkhouse. Gid is expanding the ranch and has just purchased 3 more sections to the Northwest.
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Part II, about 20 years later, is Molly's story and she's now age 43. Her 2 sons, Jimmy fathered by Gid (now age 47) and Joe the daring son of Johnny (45), are both grown and serving in the war. Joe had been with a bomber crew in England and is MIA, likely dead. Jim was sent to the Pacific theater of WWII. Eddie is no longer in the picture, Molly a widow does not plan to remarry. Johnny never married, he's a confirmed bachelor, but does plenty of "courting." Mabel and Gid have a daughter Sarah and have moved into a fine house they built in town.
Molly gives the details of her rural isolated life, raised by a drunk and the only one of his kids who didn't runoff. She felt sorry for her pathetic father and stayed on the farm to take care of him. Then she took up with the hostile misogynist Eddie White who was not unlike her own daddy. She was quite fond of Johnny, but he wasn't the marrying type and Gid treated her better than anyone, but she went ahead and married the one who often threatened and mistreated her.
When her sons were adolescents Molly told them who their real fathers were and about her ongoing dalliance with both of them. Jimmy, 13 at the time, was involved with church Sunday school and he turned hateful, ashamed over her adultery and fornication. Some how Jimmy's church failed to teach him about “Honor your father and mother," instead he spent years being cruel to his parents and never called her mom again. After Jim went off to war he sent Molly a letter saying he wasn't ever returning, no longer had religion and now preferred men. She never showed Gid the letter and later burned it. Now another letter (maybe from the army) informing her of Jimmy's death.
After the death of his son (Jim), Gid is determined to be a good example to his young daughter and informs Molly he's quitting the infidelity. She implores him to stay as her lover since he's her mainstay and Gid demands to know: "Then why did you marry that sorry bastard...It just about ruined my life." Having thought about it for days Molly decides she doesn't really know. Gid is true to his word. He most likely still wants Molly (the love of his life), but now remains faithful in his marriage to cantankerous Mabel.
Part III is 1962, another 20 years or so have past, and Johnny picks up the tale from here. He still seems to be Gid's only employee, doing all the regular maintenance required for a cattle ranch of well over 10,000 acres. No idea if that's actually possible with just one guy. At one point the two old codgers are putting up fencing and Gid suggests hiring a couple of day laborers to help, especially since Gid is still recouping from surgery. Just like his father, Gid rejects the notion of other hired hands. "I never asked for no advice," he said. "I guess I know when I'm able to work and when I'm not."
Molly has lived alone on her family's farm her whole life, a bit of a recluse. She goes to town for supplies, but visitors seem to be mostly Gid or Johnny. She has some milk cows, horses, chickens, a garden etc, but I'm not sure the story ever mentioned what she actually does for a living, for money.
This final section of the story starts with the two aging cattleman (Gid & Johnny) engaged in some mishaps which exemplify their waning talents and increasing age. Driving, Gid takes out the neighbors fence and Johnny's truck rolls away, having not set the brake. Goats try to escape the pasture through this new breach in the fencing. They try valiantly to drive the goats back, but they're useless at stopping them--one of the few LOL moments in the story. At Molly's they agree to locate her cow that wanders off at times--they're both cowboys after all. The cow takes off running, they pursue on horseback and suffer in the sticker bushes, but they do rope her. Unfortunately the poor thing suffers some injuries while being roped and pulled by the plowhorse and has to be put down.
Gid is scheduled for "routine" surgery, plus there are complications. He's still recouping in the Hospital when he decides he's had enough and Johnny helps him escape. Gid can't go home since Mabel and her politician brother would likely send him right back, so Johnny takes him to Molly's farm where she's delighted to have some one to care for. After a week or so he is not good as new, but insists on getting back to work. He and Johnny start on the fence, but Gid is easily exhausted. Eventually he's able to work all day again and sets out to repair the windwill. No, he doesn't fall to his death. There's something going on with Gid, he fell and is addled, but it's a blood clot that kills him.
After the funeral and reading of the will Johnny inherits plenty of land to add to the acres he already inherited from his own father. Of course Mabel fired him from the ranch job; she never liked him. And it's unknow who Mabel and her brother will get to run the ranch. Johnny will move back to his family's land just a few miles away.
The last page is of:
"Three Gravestones"
"Gideon Fry
1896 to 1962
Molly Taylor White
1900 to 1976
Johnny McCloud
1898 to 1985"
The End
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Mostly an enjoyable story, even with the promoting of a flexable morality.
"...caring about a person made a difference in what was right and wrong... The churches say it's wrong. The law says it's wrong. And I've always believed it was wrong--except when we did it."
Some segments tend to be dull, but not many. There are some words and dialogue used to reflect that time and place in Northern Texas, now about 100 years ago (1922 and following).
“Whyn’t you shoot that pore old mule and put him out of his misery?”
“Shoot dis mule? ...Den how’d I get aroun’?”
"...and the killdees and bullbats were swooping down over the water."
The author seems to like naming characters Old "something." There's Old Denver the horse and the oldest horse is Old Dirtdobber, some of the men include Old Man Berdeau, Old Man Peters, Old Man Ashtoe who fired cowboy Johnny and Old Man Taylor is Molly's dad who is "a sly old bastard" and "a fragrant old bastard." And many more.
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The Thalia 3 book series are all set in the north Texas town of Thalia after World War II.
1. Horseman, Pass By – 1961 (The film is titled Hud).
2. ● Leaving Cheyenne – 1962 (The film is Lovin' Molly).
3. The Last Picture Show – 1966.
The Duane Moore 5 book series are also all set in Thalia and cover Duane's life from High School thru old age.
The Last Picture Show – 1966
Texasville – 1987
Duane's Depressed - 1999
When The Light Goes - 2007
Rhino Ranch -2009
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