They Shoot Horses, Don't They? by Horace McCoy – review one of my top five crime novels - terrible movie


They Shoot Horses, Don't They? by Horace McCoy – reviewThe ruthlessness of Hollywood is laid bare in Horace McCoy's classic 1935 novelShare0inShare0Email Anita Sethi Anita SethiThe Observer, Saturday 23 April 2011Jump to comments (1)They Shoot Horses, Don't They (1969)They Shoot Horses, Don't They? (1969): (l-r) Jane Fonda, Red Buttons, Susannah York, Michael Sarrazin.Survival is all in the harsh world evoked in Horace McCoy's slim yet thematically weighty 1935 novel set in America's Great Depression. How far a human being will go to stay alive is the question at the heart of the unflinching narrative which draws on the author's own experience as a struggling movie extra, and was made into a 1969 film starring the Oscar-nominated Jane Fonda. Little wonder that book became a favourite among French existentialists.They Shoot Horses, DonÂ’t They? (Serpent's Tail Classics)by Horace McCoy Buy the bookFirst-person narrator Robert has been loitering outside Paramount studios on the day he meets his nemesis, the embittered, nihilistic Gloria, another extra. Far from being paramount to anything, these drifters are painfully peripheral. Gloria has run away from a "hell of a place", tried to poison herself, and vacillates between thoughts of stardom and suicide. Survival for Robert and Gloria means selling their souls to sustain their bodies, in "dance marathons" held in an amusement pier above the Pacific Ocean, where the sea, pounding inexorably day and night, becomes a haunting symbol. The ruthless dance competitions provide food and shelter as long as participants can "keep moving". The hope is that these degrading shows will tempt Hollywood executives to give participants a "big break", but what is broken are hearts and minds as McCoy skilfully unmasks a violent, seedy underworld beneath the revelry.The brutality of the story is offset by the poetic beauty and precision of McCoy's narrative as it hones in on the thoughts and aspirations of its outsider characters, their troubled voices lingering in the mind. In our world of fleeting reality TV stardom, this stark, urgent novel feels more timely than ever.
 •  0 comments  •  flag
Share on Twitter
Published on February 04, 2014 13:35
No comments have been added yet.


Ed Gorman's Blog

Ed Gorman
Ed Gorman isn't a Goodreads Author (yet), but they do have a blog, so here are some recent posts imported from their feed.
Follow Ed Gorman's blog with rss.