At the end of 2023 I organized my reading goals for the coming year. In a given year I don’t have a particular goal so to speak because I am mood reader, and a book that sounded inspiring I. February might appear dull in May. Toward the end of the year I read Stephen King’s On Writing. I am not one to read King as spooky stories tend to spark my overactive imagination, but the doorway to his writing process sparked a different idea in me. I wanted to read those who I considered the masters of their craft in any craft, King included. Yes, there would be wiggle room for mood reads and my favored sports micro histories. I am me after all. I set off on my 2024 reading adventure with no apparent plan other than reading those who are considered top authors by both reviewers and their peers. To my delight, at the Pulitzer announcement in May, I discovered that the runner up for biography was Larry McMurtry: A Life by Tracy Daughtery. Having already read the winner King: A Life by Jonathan Eig, I selected McMurtry: A Life from the library shelves and savored every word. I selected McMurtry along with King and David McCullough as my featured authors in this year of reading masters. At count, I have read one installment of the Lonesome Dove tetralogy and two memoirs. All have been captivating in their own way. I have at least one novel left to read later this year and wanted to save this third memoir for later, but a title that mentions the Dairy Queen has to be read in summer. I thusly set off once again for Archer City, Texas.
As an adult, Larry McMurtry divided his time between reading, writing, and book selling. Each activity stimulated the other and kept McMurtry the writer from growing stale in his older age. Being an antiquarian book seller, McMurtry came across a vast spectrum of selections that most of us who he would consider great readers never heard of. One such volume was a book of essays by German author Walter Benjamin. As an author, McMurtry received a spark of inspiration from Benjamin’s essay “The Storyteller.” McMurtry never wanted to be an author. He knew that he did not want to be a rancher but as a young man the only profession that whetted his appetite was book seller. Northwest Texas did not provide many opportunities for book acquisition, but Houston, Dallas, and even Wichita Falls did. McMurtry would acquire a few books, enough to satisfy his craving to read classics, and then sell his entire collection to pay bills. He did this twice before he published his first novel and established himself as a book seller in the antiquarian trade. At first, he might not have been interested in being a book seller either. Growing up in Archer City in the days before television or computers, McMurtry surmised that he would return to his hometown after college graduation and work at something. Years later, he did just that, but not until after he was both a renown author and book seller. Archer City became the place where he would work after he grew tired of life elsewhere, and it is Archer City that is the focal point of the essays in this book.
In 1893 Frederick Jackson Turner declared the west closed. McMurtry’s grandparents had recently settled in the plains outside of Archer City. They would have nine sons and three daughters, and most of them became cattlemen, ranchers, or farmers. McMurtry grew up hearing stories of the old west from his grandfather and uncles, the west of battles between rangers and native peoples, cattle and horse drives up the length of the west, and early days on the panhandle where ranching might have been the only possible profession. During this era, there was not even much access to radio on the Texas panhandle. The McMurtry’s did not have running water or electricity until the family moved into town so that Larry and his younger siblings would not have endure a forty mile bus ride to school. The only stories available were those given over by story tellers, earlier on front porches, and later in McMurtry’s life at watering holes such at the Dairy Queen. These eateries began to dot the west, and cowboys would gather at the Archer City location to tell tales of the old west over cheeseburgers and lime Dr Peppers. The location might have changed to one providing air conditioning during hundred degree Texas summers, but the yarns did not. Old ranchers knew of life in the old west, only two generations removed from McMurtry’s childhood. At first he did not believe that he could tell the story of the west before his time. The west was still young in comparison to Europe. It had not produced any great books. Authors like Wallace Stegner wrote about western life but when judged against classics, even Big Rock Candy Mountain did not measure up. Over the course of McMurtry’s career, he would humbly shatter the myth of the west not being conducive to producing great writers. I believe that over the course of his career he became a great storyteller.
McMurtry holds the highest regard for Marcel Proust and Virginia Woolf, who he refers to as the White Nile and Blue Nile of writers. These are the only two writers who he could willingly read following open heart surgery, where he poignantly noted that he left himself behind. Following the surgery, McMurtry could not read nor write much. By that point in his life he had written twenty three novels, telling the tale of the west that he claimed he would not write about. Lonesome Dove won the Pulitzer Prize for fiction. The tale of Gus and Call resonated with readers, who demanded more. The book grew to a tetralogy that encompassed nearly sixty years of western history from the early days of the rangers to the closing of the west. Besides this epic, McMurtry wrote about what he knew, and most of these stories began on a hill, much like the one abutting his grandparents’ ranch. Hollywood fell in love with his work, and many of his books translated to award winning films, many of which McMurtry also wrote the screenplay for. He never set out to be a storyteller along the lines of Walter Benjamin as a storyteller; all McMurtry desired to do was acquire and read books. He made amends of his by becoming a key player in the antiquarian book trade, reading European classics while writing about the old west.
Perhaps Walter Benjamin would have felt at home amongst the old ranchers at the Dairy Queen. They all came to this modern watering hole to tell their tales. That, according to Benjamin, is the difference between a storyteller and a novelist. Later in his life, McMurtry feared that younger children would not read anymore. They had television at their disposal and after the turn of the 21st century endless computerized gadgets as well. He cites the closing of countless antiquarian book stores throughout America, having acquired hundreds of thousands of these books for his own book store, Booked Up, Inc, which is now located in Archer City. The story of McMurtry’s life as a book seller can be found in his memoir Books, which is equally fascinating. In his essays focusing on storytelling, McMurtry comes to terms with his life as a storyteller. He found book trading to be a more thrilling profession, but America regarded him as a top echelon storyteller in the end. I for one would have loved to hear McMurtry regale me with stories of the old west from a Dairy Queen booth, but, then, I am one of the minority who loves to read and makes it an integral part of my life. Most of us here on goodreads would ascertain to that as well. I wonder if McMurtry knew of goodreads as this site did not take off until the end of his life. Had he been aware of it, perhaps he would no longer fear the demise of book reading. As long as society continues to produce story tellers as adept as McMurtry, books and readers are not going anywhere anytime soon.
4 stars