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The Evening Star by Larry McMurtry. Orion, 1992, 637 pages, £14.99 hb; £5.99 pbReviewed by Robert M. Young
Anyone who saw - or, more vividly, read - Terms of Endearment, will
have the character of Aurora Greenway firmly implanted in their imagination. Moviegoers
will give her the face of Shirley Maclaine and will couple her with her irascible
neighbour, Jack Nicholson, a clapped-out astronaught (the film won five Academy Awards and
five more nominations). The Evening Star tells us about the rest of her life and
the lives of her family and retinue. I greatly enjoyed it. Aside from the private pleasure
I get from McMurtrys books, they also help me as a psychotherapist, since they
provide so much insight into human nature and what makes differences between people so
fascinating.Larry McMurtrys forte is characters, not character. Many
of them have character, but what draws us to them is their idiosyncrasies - their manner,
speech, odd vocation. What is endearing about them is their wit or cussedness or how they
get into and handle an impossible situation - like dying young (Terms of Endearment)
or having to drag your best friends corpse the length of America, because it was
his dying wish to be buried by a certain stream (Lonesome Dove) or being an ageing
Las Vegas showgirl whose daughter is coming along to dethrone you (Desert Rose) or
two men loving one woman throughout their lives (Leaving Cheyenne). Some of his characters are completely fictional. Others are renditions
of figures from the history of the West. Anything for Billy is about Billy the Kid
and was written in the style and from the point of view of a dime novelist. Buffalo
Girls is about another western legend, Calamity Jane. What is absorbing about these
books is the authors self-imposed task of leaving us to infer, as best we can, the
inner worlds of these people from his evocation of what they did and said and how others
experienced them. It is almost the antithesis of a psychoanalytic account. It is all
surfaces. His characters dont ruminate much; we learn their thoughts from their
conversations and how they cope. What is surprising is just how much insight we gain from
a style which practically eschews introspection and authorial attribution of motive, two
of the main advantages of the genre of the novel.Other characters in McMurtrys books are so striking that they
become instant folk legends and the subject of indelible film portrayals. This is
especially true of Sonny, Ruth Popper and, above all, Sam the Lion, in The Last Picture
Show, which was made into Peter Bogdanavitchs first and best film, with moving
performances by Timothy Bottoms, Chloris Leachman and Ben Johnson (two Academy Awards and
six nominations). The same can be said of Homer Bannon, the old rancher in Horseman,
Pass By, and the housekeeper, Halmea, memorably performed by Melvyn Douglas and
Patricia Neale in the film version, Hud (three awards, six nominations). His most legendary creations are a couple of retired Texas Rangers,
Augustus McCrae and W. F. Call. Their saga was so wonderfully rendered by McMurtry in Lonesome
Dove that he was awarded the Pulitzer Prize for it, and it was made into a lovely
television mini-series, starring Robert Duvall and Tommy Lee Jones (Golden Globe and seven
Emmys). They are quintessential McMurtry characters, with apparently incompatible
personalities and a bad relationship on the surface but with deep affection below. The
action of the book turns on familiar theme - the complex consequences of what people get
up to in their attempts to escape boredom. They try to construct meaning from self-imposed
tasks, in this case driving their herd the whole length of America from Texas to Montana
in pursuit of the dream of starting over as ranchers at a time of life when old timers
with any sense would be retiring. The ensuing adventures make up McMurtrys most
compelling saga and includes compelling subplots and more characters: psychopathic
renegade, repentant whore, rite-of-passage adolescent, rape, lynching, Angelica Huston,
Frederick Forrest.But its still true that Aurora is one of his best portraits. She
was an utterly interfering mother in Terms of Endearment, unable to let her
daughter build a separate life - vain, hectoring, the quintessence of a mother-in-law,
wealthy WASP Houstons answer to a Yiddisha mama. At the same time, she is utterly
captivating, full of life and grit and has all sorts of colourful suitors whom she treats
with flirtatious disdain. Somehow, we learn that there is more to her as the daughter
comes down with cancer. She and the ageing astronaut surprise us and take on the weight of
dying and the fact that the grandchildrens father just isnt up to it.McMurtrys novels often allude to previous ones. Texasville was
a sequel to The Last Picture Show. I got little from the book or the film. The book
was despairing, the film wooden, as if money and fame and the times had just scooped out
the characters, leaving them to play meaningless parts in Texasvilles tawdry
centenary celebration, a day which culminates in a vast orgy of nihilistic waste - the
townspeople throwing a whole truckload of eggs at one another and the courthouse. The hero
of Some Can Whistle is the same Danny Deck we knew as a young author in All My
Friends Are Going to Be Strangers, but he is burnt out and jaded from his experience
as a successful writer for television. He gets to know his long-lost daughter, only to
have her rubbed out by a crazy ex.The Evening Star is his latest novel and finds McMurtry on his
best form. Aurora has been with a retired general for a couple of decades, and he is
definitely fading. One of her grandsons is in and out of madness, the other is in the
state penitentiary for killing his girlfriend. Various other members of the family get
into and out of scrapes, while the central relationships are between Aurora and Rosie, her
maid for forty years, and between Aurora and Jerry, a much younger man who practices
psychotherapy. There are lots of characters, and the plot is intricate.
McMurtrys writing is the nearest Americans get to Dickens, but something central to
Dickens is missing. There are no historically momentous happenings. It is all contained
within an inward-looking America, most of it in Texas, practically all in the West. What
happens occurs within the blinkered world view of American provincialism. Dignity and the
lack of it are expressed on a small screen. People live and die without having been up to
much, yet his insight and compassion mean that none has lived entirely in vain. We find Aurora, an elderly woman, still drawing men like flies - the
French Attaché, Greek taverna owners. She has an affair with a fake (but effective)
therapist, decades younger. He decides to move on and takes up with a young Latino girl,
whose jealous lover stabs him as she and Jerry are just getting into his car to go to
California. In an unusual passage, the author takes us into Auroras reflections.In the three weeks after Jerrys death Aurora had shut
herself into her little garage office and read Proust straight through. At times she put
the book down and brooded; at other times she put the book down and wept, not so much for
a lost Paris, or her own lost love, as from a profound sense of wasted time. Somehow she
had let her life slip by, achieving nothing. She did not suppose, in her hours of regret,
that she had ever had mind enough to achieve a great work, like Monsieur Proust. Perhaps
she hadnt mind enough to achieve work of even modest scope - yet it did seem to her
that she had mind enough and sufficient individuality that she ought to have achieved
more. Her mother had always hoped she would write, or, failing that, sing, but she had
done neither. She had, in the end, merely lived, partaking rather fully of the human
experience, absorbing it, and yet doing nothing with it. That was the common way, of
course, and yet the knowledge that she had not transcended the common way left her
discontented, restless. It seemed to her that her problem may have been that she absorbed
experience too avidly - so avidly that she had never taken time really to think about
it (pp. 559-60). Nothing could be further from Aurora or from McMurtrys style than
the world of Proust, but there is a knowingness in his characters which is, in its way, an
American equivalent of Prousts ruminations and his highly-textured exploration of
the centre of the self. It is not woven, however, from threads of delicate, self-obsessed
introspection. Instead, it is crafted from the exploration of roles and tasks and quips
and endurance - out there in the social division of layer, not holed up in a cork-lined chambre. The choice of Proust in this passage, like the offer of a Renoir to the daughter in Terms
of Endearment must betoken a deliberate juxtaposition of civilisations - Paris, as
compared with Paris, Texas, as it were.This reminded me of a poignant passage in The Last Picture Show,
where Lois Farrow reveals to Sonny, her daughters duped boyfriend, her nostalgia
about her secret love affair with Sam the Lion twenty years earlier, when she was
twenty-two and newly-married and Sams boys had died and his wife had gone mad.
"But you know somethin," she said, her whole body shaking.
"Its terrible to find only one man your whole life who knows what its
worth, Sonny. Its just terrible. I wouldnt be tellin you if it
wasnt. Ive looked, too - you wouldnt bu-lieve how Ive looked.,
When Sam... the Lion was seventy years old he could just walk in... I dont know, hug
me and call me Lois or somethin an do more for me than anybody. He really
knew what I was worth, an the rest of them havent, not one man in this
whole country" (pp. 198-99).There are a lot of disappointed people in McMurtrys novels,
people who carry on, not usually seeing the point of it all but making a point of enduring
and trying to keep their dignity in awful situations. I know I am making it sound pretty
sombre, but he also shows the humour and irony in peoples ridiculous messes. He also
offers a path to insight into the hearts of people which I find refreshing, touching and
helpful. I suppose I should add that he and I grew up very near each other in East Texas.
He lived in a small country town, Archer, and I grew up in a fancy suburb of Dallas,
Highland Park. I never cease to marvel at his ability to capture and convey what it was
like to grow up in a part of the world, where people are so crazy and extreme and yet
still possess a kind of strength in the face of the bleakness of life and versions of
integrity which are part of humanity at its best.Here is a list of his novels.
Horseman, Pass By, 1961 (film: Hud, 1963)
Leaving Cheyenne, 1963 (film, Lovin Molly, 1973)
The Last Picture Show, 1966 (film, 1971)
Moving On, 1970All My Friends Are Going to Be Strangers, 1972
Terms of Endearment, 1975 (film, 1983)
Somebodys Darling, 1978
Cadillac Jack, 1982
Desert Rose, 1983
Lonesome Dove, 1985 (tv mini-series, 1989)
Some Can Whistle, 1989
Buffalo Girls, 1991
Texasville, 1987 (film, 1991?)
Anything for Billy, 1988
The Evening Star, 1992There are two collections of essays:
In a Narrow Grave: Essays on Texas, 1968
Film Flam: Essays on Hollywood, 1987And one critical study:
Larry McMurtrys Texas: Evolution of the MythAustin: Eakin Press, 1987Copyright: The AuthorAddress for correspondence: 26 Freegrove Road, London N7 9RQ
robert@rmy1.demon.co.uk
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