(Original review, based on reading it perhaps 25 years ago):
An old book well worth hunting down and reading, or re-reading.
If you were to make a list of every trait that makes somebody a human being (as opposed to a Human Being, which was one of the sub-groups described in this book), it might look something like:
-humor
-sense of the absurd
-kindness
-vanity
-lack of self-awareness
...and you could go on and on and on. But whatever you came up with, you would find one of the best literary examples of that trait ever written in this book. And to weave this into an interesting plot and add genuine heartache?
Why wasn't Thomas Berger more famous? I can't understand it.
==========(New review, based on reading in July, 2020):==========
While I didn't enjoy this reading quite as much as the first, it is mostly because I remembered so much of it despite the many years between readings, and thus the element of surprise was lost. Credit the author for creating three characters (Jack Crab, Old Lodge Skins and Ralph Fielding Snell) who are quite simply unforgettable.
Old Lodge Skins in particular strikes me as one of the greatest characters in American literature. One hundred and seventy years after the events portrayed in this book took place, his frequent pontifications about the way things are and the right way and being present in the moment would not sound out of place in most corporate training seminars. (At least for corporations headquartered in California.) At the end of the day, though, I think he resonates with us because, although part of a vilified racial subgroup, he lived his life as he chose and maintained his dignity. This is quite a seductive fantasy for modern white readers, caught in the queasy knowledge of their own complicity, to varying extents, in our current societal problems.
His story is filtered through two layers of interpretation, both of whom are clearly identified as unreliable narrators. These are the other two characters I've mentioned -- Jack Crabb, the narrator of the story, and Ralph Snell, the one to whom the story is being told.
One of the amazing things about this book is how relevant it still feels. White culture is still hell-bent on destroying anything that stands in the way of profits, even while individuals within this culture value what is being lost. Probably the most amazing thing about Berger's achievement is that it works as pure entertainment; it works as a historical primer; it works as a sociological study of the Plains Indians; it works as sharp-edged social criticism, and finally it works as a philosophical exploration of how to live your life.
What it absolutely doesn't do is delve much into the lives of women, and this is probably the thing that struck me most between my reading as a high-schooler and now. Your enjoyment may diminish as a result. But for me, I still regard this as a pinnacle, if not the pinnacle, of America fiction.
(Unrelated aside: I have traveled extensively in the area of the Powder River and Bighorn Basin, where much of this story takes place, and all that fresh air and sunshine out there no doubt enhanced my enjoyment of this. I hope and pray that this area remains the lovely stretch of country it is today and isn't wiped out by coal extraction or anything similar.)