Exclusive: Larry McMurtry on the Last of the Cowboys

While Larry McMurtry is largely known by younger generations for his Pulitzer Prize-winning novel Lonesome Dove, it is his first three novels—Horseman, Pass By, Leaving Cheyenne, and The Last Picture Show—that brought him to national prominence and boldly injected realism into American literature. This trilogy, Thalia, is being re-released for the first time this month along with the following new introduction by the author, which was given exclusively to Goodreads to excerpt:
Life and art alike are filled with accidents. The big one in my career was the discovery, by chance, of William Butler Yeats, the great Irish poet, and his famous epigraph:
On life, on death.
Horseman, pass by!
Had I not stumbled upon those words, I have often wondered whether I would have written Horseman, Pass By. It was, for me, the key that turned the starter to my journey as a writer. I went home to Archer City in 1958, the summer after I graduated from North Texas State University in Denton, Texas, to cowboy on my father's ranch while I wrote the book.
I had little previous experience in writing fiction, but I jumped right into Horseman. The novel grew out of a short story I had written in the only creative writing class I attended while at North Texas State, which was about the decline and death of a famous Panhandle cattleman. It was probably my first intimation of Charles Goodnight, the great Panhandle cattleman himself. My father's own family produced nine cattlemen, who were sprinkled all over the Texas Panhandle. In all, I did five drafts, written at a five-pages-a-day pace. Once my fluency was established, I occasionally doubled that pace, but the five-pages-a-day is the one that has served me throughout most of my writing life. I finished Horseman about a week before I left Archer City for Houston, Texas, where I was about to enroll at Rice University as a graduate student in English.
Looking back, I realize that completing Horseman, Pass By marked the end of my direct contact with the myth of the cowboy—or at least, the myth carried throughout their lives by the cowboys I knew. My father was one of those cowboys. I myself have carried that myth through more than forty books. I didn't know where the completion of that first novel might lead, but I did know, once I finished it, that my life was to be spent with words.
Leaving Cheyenne, written a few years after my first novel, is, in my estimation, a vast improvement over the occasionally pleasing lyricism of Horseman, Pass By. At the very least, I like to feel that in Leaving Cheyenne, I had matured as a writer. It tells the bittersweet story of a longtime love triangle among a rancher, his cowboy, and an appealing countrywoman who loves them both. It might be generous to call it my American version of Jules et Jim, Francois Truffaut's lively masterpiece that tells the same story in French.
The Last Picture Show, the third book contained in this Thalia trilogy and originally published in 1966, was written while I was teaching freshman English at Rice University in Houston. It was written in order to teach myself how to write fiction in the third person. I wrote it in the first person and then painstakingly translated it into third person. The Last Picture Show is mostly known by the brilliant movie (written mostly by me and Polly Platt) directed by Peter Bogdanovich. Polly, Peter's wife at the time, had read the novel, loved it, and then pestered her husband to read it and consider adapting it into a film. She had multiple roles on the movie, including production design, makeup, and helping Peter find its brilliant cast. Polly and I remained close long after the film ended and up to her death in 2011.
The novel takes place in a small town in 1950s Texas I called Thalia, much like the small town where I grew up, but that small town might live anywhere within the vastness of this great United States. The movie house in Archer City burned down in the 1950s, when the population was less than two thousand people—the same census number today. The closing of the picture show in a place already isolated from the outside world would undoubtedly intensify, both intellectually and emotionally, that sense of isolation.
After World War II, much of America began an exodus from the small towns to the cities. And so the myth of the cowboy grew purer, because there were so few actual cowboys to dispel it. While writing these three novels, it was clear to me that I was witnessing the dying of a way of life, too—the rural, pastoral way of life. And in many of the books that I've produced, it has taken thousands of words to attend, as best I could, to the passing of the cowboy as well: the myth of my country, and of my people, too.
—Larry McMurtry
The above excerpt was reprinted from Thalia by Larry McMurtry © 2017 by Larry McMurtry. Used with permission of the publisher, Liveright Publishing Corporation, a division of W.W. Norton & Company, Inc.
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Comments Showing 1-50 of 57 (57 new)


Revisiting the last days of "Thalia" again will be a rewarding experience .


I have a brother in San Antonio and he told me of a wonderful trip they took to Archer City and I think his SO bought some books.


Is Mr. McMurtry still tending his store? Are visitors who are a little star struck and making the pilgrimage welcome? Anyone know?
I've written one fan letter in my life. It was to Mr McMurtry. I talked to him about a few lines from his forwards that I thought were insightful.



I agree 100% with you. I read it way before the mini series. I cried when Deets & Pea Eye were in the dust storm. I was there with them!






absolutely true!!





I read about one novel a week and I have to say that Lonesome Dove is one of the best I have ever read too. I have enjoyed all of his books over the years.

Don't forget Terms of Endearment either.

They are on horses, tractors and trucks continuing to work the cattle industry of Texas and their roots are as deep, or actually deeper than Gus and Call's.

I agree with you. If you live in Texas and Oklahoma, you will still see that the cowboys are still with us.


We are in California as well. Working cow camps in the foothills of the Sierras - tho to be fair, one good dog now takes the place of 3 or 4 good riders. An evolution of sorts. But the branding iron is still heated over a (careful) open fire, we sleep on very hard ground, eat nothing but beans for weeks, and watch constantly for coyotes and mountain lions. I don't do it any more - age catches up...cowboyin is still alive in these United States, but I can feel it fading as a small family lifestyle....

I know, it breaks my heart. The proposed Dallas to Houston bullet train (IF built) will destroy our fifth generation family ranch and go straight through my Mom & Dad's ranch house that they built themselves along with my grandfathers and one carpenter. Progress indeed......

Really, all the intermountain West. Even California!
I'm a retired exploration geologist, and had many pleasant (and some unpleasant) meetings with ranchers over the years. One that stands out was in central Nevada, where I was eating lunch when the rancher rode up on a 4-wheeler. After reminding me to leave his gates as I find them, we chatted about his new ride. So much better than a horse, he said. No saddling needed, and you don't have to feed it in the winter! The probem? Getting it back from the kids, when he needed it for work. The guy would've been a natural for a Honda commercial....

Dearest Tom: what makes you think I did ?


I didn't know that 'picture show' was part of a trilogy, so I'll definitely be buying it. They would be good candidates for the Folio Society to make into high-quality hardbacks too.



McM clearly has a love-hate relationship with this. Maybe because the lit'ry set hates Westerns? (and westerners). You have to recall, he was a student of Wallace Stegner, who struggled all his career to escape the brand of "regional writer." Seems kinda dumb now, but a Big Thing back then.
The novel that most directly deconstructs the Cowboy Mythos (imo) is Telegraph Days, which if you haven't read, you should. Nellie Courtright is a wonder, and this is the most cheerful of LMcM's late-period Westerns. Not to be missed.

My review of Telegraph Days (which I just retrieved from Amazon) is now up at
https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...

"Just sell it all" sums it up pretty well, I think.
See the fine review by Erik Spanberg at http://www.csmonitor.com/2006/0530/p1...

That's the thing about Larry's books, his characters take on a life of their own. He writes them vividly, with attention to detail and with an understanding of the human condition in all it's complicated glories. There are very few pure evil villains in his books, though there might be plenty of strife, but Larry does not paint things as black and white, his characters are multifaceted like all real people. It doesn't matter whether the setting is in pioneer days, the 1940s, the 50s, 60s, or later. Whether it's a journey through early American wilderness, hanging around a tiny town in Texas, the bigger cities of Texas, or the Hollywood hills of California, this holds true. You can't help but love these people for all their many unique and fascinating personalities. He puts you in their heads so you see life through their eyes, and makes you understand their hearts, if they have one, occasionally someone doesn't. Because no matter the set, the time, the events, or the place his tales are primarily about people. I could never get enough.
He is a wonderful writer, very possibly my favorite author, and the reason I moved to Texas. His stories are as apple pie and as endearing as Mark Twain, only completely different. Can not wait to revisit this trilogy. This was just the excuse I needed. Of the 3, I think Leaving Cheyenne was my favorite, but that was 20 years ago, maybe longer. So it'll be fun to see how they sit with me now. The last Picture Show may have more meaning to me now that I have maudlin moments.
“I'm sure partial to the evening,' Augustus said. 'The evening and the morning. If we just didn't have to have the rest of the dern day I'd be a lot happier.”

Agree!!

Me too."
Deb wrote: "Ellis wrote: "My favourite is 'All My Friends Are Going To Be Strangers'."
Me too."
i followed every book in that series. thats where emma and flap came from!! and my hero forever, Aurora Greenway.


me too.
Getting back to Mr. McMurty, he was a delightful gentleman, somewhat shy and diffident, and very polite about my effusive gushing. I'm thrilled another generation might be getting a chance to explore his delightful tales.