Close Range

Close Range (Wyoming Stories #1)

3.99 of 5 stars 3.99  ·  rating details  ·  7,090 ratings  ·  556 reviews
From the Pulitzer Prize-winning and bestselling author of The Shipping News and Accordion Crimes comes one of the most celebrated short-story collections of our time. Annie Proulx's masterful language and fierce love of Wyoming are evident in these breathtaking tales of loneliness, quick violence, and the wrong kinds of love. Each of the stunning portraits in Close Range r...more
Paperback, 288 pages
Published February 10th 2000 by Scribner (first published 1999)
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Nine Stories by J.D. SalingerA Good Man is Hard to Find and Other Stories by Flannery O'ConnorComplete Stories and Poems by Edgar Allan PoeDubliners by James JoyceThe Martian Chronicles by Ray Bradbury
Collections of Short Stories
52nd out of 1,169 books — 879 voters
Lonesome Dove by Larry McMurtryTrue Grit by Charles PortisMan Hunt by David R.  GrossBury My Heart at Wounded Knee by Dee BrownBlood Meridian, or the Evening Redness in the West by Cormac McCarthy
Best Westerns
43rd out of 323 books — 428 voters


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Lucrezia
"La realtà non è mai un granché utile da queste parti" (Anonimo allevatore di bestiame)


Con queste laconiche parole poste ad epigrafe si apre questa raccolta di racconti di Annie Proulx. E trovo che non ve ne siano di più azzeccate per cominciare a parlarne.Invaghitami della copertina di questo libro (che ,ohimè, nella mia edizione, non è codesta, ma questa: http://shop.bcdeditore.it/images/P/88... . Che purtroppo ho trovato in versione micro , ma può essere riassunta come solitario e sperso cava...more
Bennet
I recently reread this and just want to say (again and again) that I love it. I am awed by the talent for authentically, seamlessly and irresistibly writing the vernacular of a place -- its landscape and language and quirks and peeves, everything to do with the habits of its people and weather, ultimately situated so as to be seen within the grand scheme of things or some semblance thereof. And I marvel even more at the mastery required to do that within the confines of a short story.

The great...more
Colin Miller
Nov 04, 2008 Colin Miller rated it 2 of 5 stars  ·  review of another edition Recommends it for: Fans of stories about country livin'
I’m more inclined to recommend individual stories out of E. Annie Proulx’s Close Range as opposed to the whole book. Every story is set in Wyoming (as is noted by the book’s subtitle). This makes for an interesting dynamic as the reader already has an idea of what Wyoming is like and a setting description given in one story can bleed over into the others. The most famous story is now “Brokeback Mountain” because nothing promotes a book like the movie. (For the record, “Brokeback Mountain” is one...more
Jessica
Dec 05, 2007 Jessica rated it 3 of 5 stars Recommends it for: b.r. myers, again, once he works through his issues in psychoanalysis
I love E. Annie Proulx. I honestly think that Myers guy must just have some problems he's got to sort out. I didn't read his book, but the examples he gave in that article of how awful her prose is only reminded me how much I enjoy her stuff, and made me want to go back and read some Proulx again. And I really don't think I'm especially pretentious, or cowed by snooty literary reviewers, whom I barely read. In fact I barely read at all these days, I have such a short attention span, and to me th...more
Andrew
Excellent. I usually react a bit badly to the faux-naif voice, which she slips in and out of. But eventually the overwrought language began to seem just exuberant. And the tragedies of the stories were more celebratory than painful: these characters push almost joyfully toward their doom. (Christ, I loved "The Blood Bay," the little yarn that stops long before the characters get whatever it is they have coming.) The leaping language that stops every once in a while to use their voice -- "Pair A...more
Peter
This is such a beautifully written book. The prose is so well crafted and polished until it shines. Annie Proulx's subtle mixture of the character's voice and local dialect and slang with her own elegiacal descriptions is a great example of free indirect style. She is amazing at describing landscapes and summing up people in a few sentences and she's good at the subtlety of smell (all these cattle ranchers pong). My favourite stories were Brokeback Mountain - but you kind of imagine the story wi...more
J
Jan 15, 2010 J rated it 5 of 5 stars
Shelves: favorites
Tell you what, them queer cowboys like to broke my heart. Annie Proulx, I wish I knew how to quit you.

Your strange mix of roughed up realism and supernatural does something to my insides. It’s too much for ordinary sentence structure. Pours out all over the confines of punctuation, seeping into my subconscious until I’m drunk and reeling reading just a sentence then a few paragraphs and soon the whole story to anyone who’ll listen. And still I want more.
Matt
"Only earth and sky matter. Only the endlessly repeated flood of morning light. You begin to see that God does not owe us much beyond that." (99)

Annie Proulx creates some very convincing characters and stories. Her descriptions and sentences often make me reread and analyze them, how amazing her metaphors and deep her imagery. She is an extremely talented writer.

All of these stories are steeped in Wyoming culture, life and lore. The collection starts out very strong, and ends even stronger, alth...more
Josh
Sometimes there are so many characters you stop paying attention to who's saying what. Sometimes there are so many storylines, one emerging from another, you forget who is being described. I could criticize Proulx for this, but the irritation is my own fault. I want to read a short story collection as fast as I read a novel, but you just can't. You need to read about one a day, and slowly with Proulx, to really absorb how full, engaging, unique and realized each story is. The lives of the charac...more
Charissa
Dec 15, 2007 Charissa rated it 5 of 5 stars Recommends it for: anyone with a brain
I absolutely love E. Annie Proulx. She does that thing with words that makes me go all dissociated from the world around me and live inside the world she creates. I am almost always disturbed by her stories but I can't stop reading them. In fact, her writing is so good that when I saw "Brokeback Mountain" (which I saw *before* I read her short fic on which it was based), I didn't think it was a great story... until I read her actual story. There is ONE line in her piece that makes the story GREA...more
Erin
Aug 16, 2007 Erin rated it 5 of 5 stars Recommends it for: a reality check
Shelves: troubles-abound, land
Before Brokeback Mountain gets taken entirely out of context, take a look at Annie Proulx's Close Range: Wyoming Stories, the collection in which the story is featured. If you've seen the movie but have yet to read the story, I suggest you begin here. If you've already read the story by itself, come back to this collection entire. While Diana Ossana (one of the movie's produces & screenwriters) came across it in the New Yorker and felt inspired to write a screenplay, the story itself does no...more
Bookshop
When I discovered that the movie was based on an award winning short story which was first published in the New Yorker, I was intrigued. So I bought this edition which is published as a movie tie-in.

The written form sorts of explain of some aspects of the movie which I find confusing such as what happened to Jack Twist in the end. Brokeback Mountain is perhaps the only readable story in this collection. Brokeback Mountain the story is bare and gritty as the movie is lush and tender. I applaud An...more
Joe S
Dec 05, 2007 Joe S rated it 4 of 5 stars Recommends it for: my Republican rancher father, who will love the covers off this book
Shelves: short-stories
If you already know why Annie Proulx rox ur fuckin face off, then I don't know why you're reading a review instead of the book itself. It's Annie Fuckin Proulx. Read it, you bastard.

Proulx gets away with all the shit that no one else could. A grab bag of voices, all unlikely, that switch mid-sentence; stories that end long after the first narrative arc dead-ended and long before the second gets off the ground; nonsensical lines that don't mean squat no matter how you squint but sure sound purdy....more
Trin
Should actually be subtitled "Why Not to Live in Wyoming." Seriously, this is one of the most depressing collections of short stories I've ever encountered. Which is not to say they're not good, just that I'd kind of like to challenge Proulx to write a bit of light comedy or something.

"Brokeback Mountain" is the best, and I actually find the story much more evocative and powerful than the film. (Not that Jake Gyllenhaal and Heath Ledger making out is anything to sneeze at, mind.) Still, I'm glad...more
Tara
Nov 30, 2008 Tara added it
Shelves: short-stories
I am pretty sure that title is supposed to be ironic. Also, this book ran the gamut from urban legends [in the least urban part of the country. would that be prarie legends?] to horror stories to murder most foul! also Brokeback Mountain, which, if you've been living under a rock, is gay cowboy love. I had read BbM years ago, but reading it again a couple of weeks after the election [on the same day, notably, that I watched both "I Can't Marry You" and "The Laramie Project"] made me cry. My othe...more
Rita Grim
This book is magical in the most hardcore way possible. These stories are set in a harsh, unforgiving world, that is nonetheless captivating and magnificent. Proulx transports you to a place of cruelty and deviance but it's also a world of enchantment and mysterious beauty. Sometimes that beauty is icy cold in the scorching heat, and other times it is brutal and desperate and sad.

In one of the stories called "The Governors of Wyoming" there is a scene that still strikes me as one of the most tra...more
Carinya Kappler
Having read and enjoyed Annie Proulx’s novel “The Shipping News” I fully expected to love her collation of short stories included in this book and set in Wyoming. My only reservation was that it is difficult for short stories to repeatedly grab my attention and I wondered if this would be the case again. However, every story had a uniqueness and quality that not only presented an entertaining humorous strand but also displayed the stark bleak reality of a harsh culture springing from inescapable...more
Matthew
This is a set of modern folktales. A lot of the tales are sort of frightening. Proulx has a bitter, tasty, dark humor. Most of the characters are lonely and miserable.

Proulx is a writer like McCarthy who manages to fit in a great deal of mechanical detail that somehow makes the story more gripping and immediate, instead of causing it to lag. The difference between Proulx and McCarthy (as fierce, modern writers of westerns) is that McCarthy can write convincingly about the punishing violence of t...more
Clinton
Just reread this, after I kept looking up, seeing it on the shelf, and thinking, "Man, I need to reread that."

There isn't a wasted word in this book. The stories are lean, visceral, and operatic. Her characters and plots surprise in the way that Flannery O'Connor's do, by spontaneous manifestations of grace and evil.

The collection begins and ends with two masterpieces: "The Half-Skinned Steer"--a tale of fate that uses an Icelandic legend--and "Brokeback Mountain," a love story that rings with...more
Angie
Don’t worry—I haven’t given much away here:

Wow—A whole new world (No! Not the theme to Aladin). This is a bunch of short stories about such things as escaping the hard life of Wyoming. Another where a mother belittles her son enough that he hates her but she also shows tries to show him what riding bulls in a rodeo can do to men…(the making of a serial rapist?). Another where a near-mute, disabled person is cut up for things he may or may not have done.

Poverty in a place where things are miles...more
Aerin
Annie Proulx is an incredible writer. This is the first book of hers I've read, but I'll definitely be looking for more.

I picked this one up because of its subtitle. I've driven through Wyoming several times, always as part of a cross-country road trip, and though I've never stayed for long - not even for the night, that I recall - Wyoming epitomizes for me that feeling that I so miss when I'm not road tripping: The sense of being all alone in a vast emptiness of road and sky and natural wonder....more
M—
I picked this up to dabble in some more of Proulx's stories. I had very much enjoyed the film versions of her Brokeback Mountain and The Shipping News, although my enjoyment of the text stories was mixed, and the cover artwork of this book is gorgeous. I thought it would be a nice place to start reading a little more Proulx. And it probably is... I'm just not cut out to be a Proulx fan.

Two stars. Not to my taste. Best for fans of westerns.

Story summaries:
(view spoiler)[The half-skinned steer — O...more
Elise
Perhaps only the writing of Annie Proulx can inspire one to consider a vacation to a Wyoming ranch, not because it seems like a particularly hospitable place to be - and her characters, mostly tragic folk, are a testament to that. Rather, her stories communicate a deep love and reverence for the American West, and for the people who work the land and the livestock, making me feel like I ought to make my way to that part of the country sometime, to see what it's all about.

But back to her characte...more
Eric Bruen
I loved most of these stories. Brokeback mountain, which I had already read, was unsurprisingly my favourite. Proulx manages to fit so much into so few pages, and break your heart along the way. I swear she must have been a gay cowboy in another life. Some other stand outs for me were 'The Half-Skinned Steer', 'Job History', 'The Blood Bay', 'People in Hell Just Want a Drink of Water', 'The Bunchgrass Edge of the World', 'A Lonely Coast' and '55 Miles to the Gas Pump'. So that's most of them, cl...more
Melki
Once again, Annie Proulx proves she's got bigger balls than most of the male writers out there.
Whether they're roping, ranching, or riding the rodeo, the characters in these tales are all tough, hard-living people who do what needs to be done and don't spend a lot of time whining about it.

Some of their exploits made my mouth drop open:

Their endurance of pain was legendary. When a section of narrow mountain trail broke away under Marion's horse, the horse falling with him onto rocks below, the a...more
Ian Hewitt
A truly wonderful book, that I don't mind telling you made me cry like a baby.

"Nobody leaves Wyoming unless they have to," Annie Proulx. I'm pleased I waited until I had to leave Wyoming to read this book, despite it stirring powerful feelings of homesickness. I had encountered 1-2 Proulx stories in the New Yorker before now, I had loved the film version of Brokeback Mountain, and of course, I lived in Laramie for a decade where Proulx is something of a quiet celebrity.

The passage quoted below,...more
Joanne in Canada
This book seems to embody my impression of Proulx's writing: inconsistent. I loved The Shipping News, liked Postcards and didn't finish Accordion Crimes. The stories in this collection range from short vignettes that read like exercises for a writing class to the incredibly powerful Brokeback Mountain (though I wonder if some of the stories would have had more power if I had already seen the movie!)

The writing is superb, the characters range from fascinating to bizarre, the plots tend to cover m...more
Thalia
I'm not a big fan of either short stories or nature stories, but this collection of sometimes disturbing, sometimes supernatural glimpses of the harsh life in Wyoming, is just wonderful. I admit I bought it because I wanted to read Brokeback Mountain before going to see the movie (which I haven't seen yet), so I read that story frist. Then I read the rest of the stories, in between I went back to Brokeback Mountain, read the rest and read BM again. And I know it wasn't the last time. The whole b...more
Kenneth
Just re- read "Brokeback Mountain" last night and it is far better even than I remembered. It is now officially my favorite love story of all time.

The fact that probably the best movie of 1997 was made from this short story demonstrates the pith and density of the story telling in this book. Proulx (I think rhymes with 'crew'), is, in my opinion, an absolute master of the short story genre.

I happened to also read a book by another Wyoming author, CJ Box, yesterday, the similarly titled "Out of R...more
Charlene
Three chapters into Proulx's newest book, Bird Ranch, I decided that I should read some of her fiction, preferably something set in Wyoming. Didn't plan on reading all of these; short stories are not normally my thing. But Proulx is an excellent writer and perhaps because they all share the rural Wyoming setting, they hang together well as a collection. My favorite story, A Lonely Coast, was the only story with a female narrator. Probably the most memorable story to me was Pair of Spurs; certain...more
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Vivid Writing 2 22 Mar 31, 2012 11:04am  
Close Range: Brokeback Mountain and Other stories (Paperback)
Close Range: Wyoming Stories (Hardcover)
Close Range
Close Range: Wyoming Stories
Close Range: Wyoming Stories (Paperback)

1262010
Also published as E. Annie Proulx
Edna Annie Proulx is an American journalist and author. Her second novel, The Shipping News (1993), won the Pulitzer Prize for Fiction and the National Book Award for fiction in 1994. Her short story "Brokeback Mountain" was adapted as an Academy Award, BAFTA and Golden Globe Award-winning major motion picture released in 2005. Brokeback Mountain received massive c...more
More about E. Annie Proulx...
The Shipping News Brokeback Mountain: Now a Major Motion Picture Accordion Crimes Postcards That Old Ace In The Hole

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“You stand there, braced. Cloud shadows race over the buff rock stacks as a projected film, casting a queasy, mottled ground rash. The air hisses and it is no local breeze but the great harsh sweep of wind from the turning of the earth. The wild country--indigo jags of mountain, grassy plain everlasting, tumbled stones like fallen cities, the flaring roll of sky--provokes a spiritual shudder. It is like a deep note that cannot be heard but is felt, it is like a claw in the gut...
...Other cultures have camped here a while and disappeared. Only earth and sky matter. Only the endlessly repeated flood of morning light. You begin to see that God does not owe us much beyond that.”
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“Secretly, he was proud to own a horse that had the sand to eat a raw cowboy.” 5 people liked it
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