Posts Tagged ‘USA - western’

Image of The Assassination of Jesse James by the Coward Robert Ford
Author: Ron Hansen
ISBN: 0285637541 DDC: 813.54
See also: LibraryThing ;

He was growing into middle age and was living then in a bungalow on Woodland Avenue. Green weeds split the porch steps, a wasp nest clung to an attic gable, a rope swing looped down from a dying elm tree and the ground below it was scuffed soft as flour.

I think this is one of the rare cases where watching the film version improves your enjoyment of the novel. Maybe because for certain passages I could really here the narrator from the film while I was reading. I think that this might make an excellent audio book. Then again, I’ve never listened to an audio book, so what do I know.

In case you didn’t pick the basic plot up from the title of this novel ;) it revolves around the infamous Jesse James and his murderer Robert “Bob” Ford.

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Tags: 813.54, 9 Stars, assassin, fictional bio, historical fiction, Jesse James, murder, Robert Ford, Ron Hansen, The Assassination of Jesse James by the coward Robert F, USA - 1880's, USA - Reconstruction & Industrialisation, USA - western

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Writ & Dir: Andrew Dominik ; based on the book by Ron Hansen

  • Brad Pitt … Jesse James
  • Mary-Louise Parker … Zee James
  • Casey Affleck … Robert Ford
  • Sam Rockwell … Charley Ford
  • Jeremy Renner … Wood Hite
  • Sam Shepard … Frank James
  • Garret Dillahunt … Ed Miller
  • Paul Schneider … Dick Liddil

I loved this film.

I loved everything about it. The acting was brilliant. The way the story unfolded. The narration. The casting. The scenery. The cinematography. The soundtrack. Everything was just great. Best film I’ve seen this year. Which’d be a higher compliment if this wasn’t the first film I’ve been to see so far this year. But I’m guessing it’ll be up on the top ten list by the end of 2008.

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Tags: 10 Stars, 1860-1890, Andrew Dominik, based on book, betrayal, biopic, Brad Pitt, C19th, Casey Affleck, character driven, Garret Dilahunt, Jeremy Renner, Jesse James, Mary-Louise Parker, murder, Paul Schneider, R15A, Ron Hansen, Sam Rockwell, Sam Shepard, The Assassination of Jesse James by the coward Robert F, USA - western

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6
Feb

Blood Meridian

   Posted by: Fence   in Books

Or the evening redness
Author: Cormac McCarthy
ISBN: 0679728759
DDC: 813.5420
See also: CormacMcCarthy.com ; Library Thing

See the child. He is pale and thin, he wears a thin and ragged linen shirt. He stokes the scullery fire. Outside lie dark turned fields with rags of snow and darker woods beyond that harbor yet a few last wolves.

This may sound contradictory; I would heartily recommend this book, I have no idea what it is all about. I can tell you a basic outline of the plot, our main protagonist, who is known only as the kid, leaves home at fourteen and travels the American West, encountering violent deed after violent deed, ending up riding with the Glanton gang as they set out to “protect” people from the savage Indians.

That is the storyline, but that isn’t what this book is about, as I said, I have no idea what it is about. Violence is obviously a central theme, but whether McCarthy means that such violence is a part of all humanity and impossible to ignore, or whether he means it as a warning, or indeed something completely different I couldn’t say. So why would I recommend it?

Quite simply the prose is just beautiful. It may be describing horrible acts of death and destruction, but it reads wonderfully.

The man who believes that the secrets of the world are forever hidden lives in mystery and fear. Superstition will drag him down. The rain will erode the deeds of his life. But that man who sets himself the task of singling out the thread of order from the tapestry will by the decision alone have taken charge of the world and it is only be taking charge that he will effect a way to dictate the terms of his own fate. [...] The freedom of birds is an insult to me. I’d have them all in zoos.

I think I’ll probably have to read it again at some point, maybe with some thought thrown in, but for now I’m happy to have read it.

Tags: 10 Stars, 813.5420, beautiful prose, Blood Meridian, Cormac McCarthy, death, humanity, murder, USA - western, violence, War, well-written

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17
Nov

One Thousand White Women

   Posted by: Fence   in Books

The Journals of May Dodd
Author: Jim Fergus
ISBN: 0312199430
DDC: 813.54
See also: Library Thing ; HistoricalFavorites ; Jim Fergus.com

23 March 1875
Today is my birthday, and I have received the greatest gift of all - freedom! I make these first poor scribblings aboard the westbound Union Pacific train with departed Union Station Chicago at 6.35 a.m. this morning, bound for Nebraska Territory.

Image of One Thousand White WomenIn 1854 a Cheyenne chief asked the United States government for one thousand white brides to marry into the people. Cheyenne society was a matrilineal society the resulting children, to their minds, would belong to white society. Yet they would also have an understanding of Cheyenne ways, and so it seemed a good way of joining white man’s society. Of course this didn’t go down to well in the white man’s world, and the offer was refused.

In this novel Fergus imagines what would have happened had the US govt decided to go along with this Cheyenne idea. In secret, of course.

The main protagonist in the novel is May Dodd, it is her journal that we are reading. And the letters she wrote to her family members back east, knowing she would never post them, and so using them more as a method of venting her frustrations and feelings at life in general. Before she agreed to join the Brides programme May was locked away in a mental asylum. The reason, she tells us, is that she committed the crime of falling in love. Falling in love and having two out of wedlock children with a man far beneath her in class and standing. Her family were not impressed and so arranged to have her placed out of sight, and out of mind. And, in order to escape the asylum she agrees to travel west and marry a strange savage Indian.

The whole book is told through Dodd’s eyes, she introduces us to the other women who have likewise agreed. The criminal, the insane, the poor and the adventurous. But there aren’t a thousand, she and her companions are the first train to leave the east. And as gold is discovered in Indian territory, they will be the last.

I quite enjoyed this book. It tells a good story and moves at a fairly decent pace. The writing style is very readable and it is all entertaining.

But May and her companions don’t really seem all that well-drawn as characters. Part of that I suppose is because it is May who is describing the other women, and indeed the Cheyennes she meets. And she describes them in cliches and stereotypes. We have the southern plantation lady with a drawl, a poodle, and a reluctance to marry any dahmn niggah, there are the Irish red headed twins with their thieving and oirish accents. The silent and noble Cheyenne chief, the dirty no-good half-breed.

And because of that I was never really all that gripped by this read. And it also made me wonder of some of the events that happened, or character traits, were there simply to move the plot along. Merely a device to get X here and Y there. Still, it was entertaining, and raised some interesting points. But at the end of the day it wasn’t a great read.

Tags: 1854, 6 Stars, 813.54, alternate history, Cheyenne, clichéd, diary, first person narrator, group read, Historical Favorites, historical fiction, Indians, Jim Fergus, native Americans, One Thousand White Women, stereotypes, USA - western

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19
Oct

Wyatt Earp

   Posted by: Fence   in Moving Pictures

Dir: Lawrence Kasdan
Writ: Lawrence Kasdan & Dan Gordon
# Kevin Costner - Wyatt Earp
# Denis Quaid - Doc Holliday
# Gene Hackman - Nicholas Earp
# David Andrews - James Earp
# Linden Ashby - Morgan earp
# Michael Madsan - Virgil Earp
# Bill Pullman - Ed Masterson
# Tom Sizemore - Bat Masterson

Everyone’s heard of Wyatt Earp haven’t they? The gunfight at the OK corral, Dodge city, Tombstone and Doc Holliday are all part of the western mythology. Part of a place of heroes and baddies, white hats and black hats, where usually, in the end the good guys save the day, possibly riding off into the sunset. Read the rest of this entry »

Tags: based on true story, Bill Pullman, Dan Gordon, David ANdrews, Dennis Quaid, Gene Hackman, Kevin Costner, Lawrence Kasdan, Linden Ashby, Michael Madsen, Tom Sizemore, USA - western, Wyatt Earp

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