Catching up on Classics (and lots more!) discussion

This topic is about
The Way West
Buddy Reads
>
The Way West Buddy Read (expanded to include The Big Sky; Fair Land, Fair Land and These Thousand Hills)
If there is a way to download, I have missed it, Sue. When I read there, I have to just read from their site. Worth it when the book cannot be found elsewhere for anything less than a mint.
Many thanks to those who are waiting for Lori and me to finish The Big Sky. Should we say mid-June for starting Fair Land, Fair Land, and should we just continue to use this thread or do you guys prefer a new one?

The site has to follow the same copyright laws as your local library. Also, the authors aren't going to write books for free. Colson Whitehead and other authors have been very vocal about this site. Having said that, I also appreciate finding items on this site that I can't find elsewhere. It's a balance.
I use it primarily for out of print or older books that libraries never want to keep anymore. I found it when I was trying to find the oldest of the Pulitzer's for my challenge. I never read new books there, and I'm surprised anything as new as Colson Whitehead would even be included. It is far less convenient a way to read than buying a Kindle or print version, but I have been grateful for it a time or two.

My local library is really great, and it has all three of these books in hardback. I will be returning The Way West and picking up The Big Sky and Fair Land, Fair Land later on this week when they are transferred to my local branch.
I will be reading everyone's comments when I get a chance today and will be adding my own. This is really such a big story.
So pleased you finished, Shirley and excited to see your comments. This was indeed a big story. I am enjoying The Big Sky. Guthrie had a great style, he just pulls you right into the place and time. I think The Way West appeals more because we can all imagine ourselves as these pioneers, but the blazing of the Mountain Men is an important element as well.

I'm so glad to hear that, Sara! From the comments I've read, this one is a little more "earthy" than The Way West? But like you, I agree that "the blazing of the Mountain Men is an important element as well. This is a part of the westward movement that has also fascinated me. When I read that Dick Summers had met with Jim Bridger and others at the rendezvous in years past, I immediately knew what he was talking about from other books I've read. I'm sure I'll enjoy it as well. I'm anxious to get my book in and join you and Lori.

This is a pretty raw tale, but then that is true of history. It would not have been either easy or pretty. I am beginning the last section and have found it lives up to the The Way West for me. I suspect that my already formed love of Dick Summers helped.

This made me laugh! Sounds like a great plan, Lori! I read Lonesome Dove many, many years ago and thought it was great. I look forward to continue reading Guthrie with you.

I agree with you, Sara. These early pioneers, the trappers, were necessarily a rough bunch. They had to be to survive in the wilderness as they did. I'm sure Guthrie wrote The Big Sky in their voice.

Lori, get that Lonesome Dove read! I didn’t even know about the book until a few years ago. I would have never predicted that I would give a book about a cattle drive five stars. Of course, it is about so much more than that.
If you are like me, you won’t want to put LD down, so it will go fast even though it is long. It’s the type of book to savor over Memorial Day weekend. Like Dick Summers, Augustus McCrae (sp?) is one of the great western fictional heroes. For me, I loved him even better than Dick Summers. And it fits in nicely with this time period (just pre The Way West) going from Texas to Montana.
Sara, thanks so much for your organizing skills, and, as always, I enjoy your comments.
I ordered Fair Land, Fair Land today. Okay, cowgirls, let’s do it!
Lonesome Dove is a 6-star book (minimum) and Terry is so right--Augustus is one of the greatest characters ever conceived. I hope to join in, Lori, but not sure I will be able to. It is so hard to convince myself to make time for re-reads when there are so many I have not read screaming at me. But, I will at least be popping in to see what you guys are having to say about it!
I would love to know if these books we are reading now were read by McMurtry and inspired him. I can see how they might have been.
I just closed the book on The Big Sky and I am trying to digest before I write my review. I am glad I read The Way West first, but I loved The Big Sky as well. Looking forward to Fair Land, Fair Land!
I would love to know if these books we are reading now were read by McMurtry and inspired him. I can see how they might have been.
I just closed the book on The Big Sky and I am trying to digest before I write my review. I am glad I read The Way West first, but I loved The Big Sky as well. Looking forward to Fair Land, Fair Land!
Sue K.H. - After reading your review on The Big Sky, I wanted to make a few comments about it here.
OMG, The ending was a gut-punch for me, but I saw it as the final and complete severing of Boone from anything like civilization. (view spoiler)
OMG, The ending was a gut-punch for me, but I saw it as the final and complete severing of Boone from anything like civilization. (view spoiler)

OMG, The ending was a gut-punch for me, but I saw it as the final and complete severing of Boone..."
Wow Sara! Your explanation is so beautiful! I loved the Eden reference! It makes sense and like you said knowing that he did create strong women in The Way West would have made a difference for me. Still, that ending! I'm still mad about it. I've never been so mad about an ending. (view spoiler)

I visualized a man who spent his youth in freedom and exploration and danger, testing himself daily who, toward the end of his life, wants to revisit those old familiar places. But when he gets there, everything has changed, and he realizes he can “never go back home again.” Everyone he knew is either dead or, like him, aging rapidly. So when they reach Oregon, he knows he must go back to the mountains and the Plains and the Popo Agee and live out his life in the only place that really felt like home to him.
Dick Summers understood that his way of life was past, and a new day was dawning… a time of marching civilization, as Lije Evans so adequately described when he reflected:
They'd made it. They had rolled the miles. And back of them came others. Crossers of plains. Grinders through the dust. Climbers of mountains. Forders of rivers. Meeters of dangers. Sailors at last of the big waters. Nation makers. Builders of the country.Lije understood that they were just one cog in this great migration westward. Others would follow in their footsteps. And men like Dick Summers would either have to adapt or try to recreate the past as they roamed the mountains and plains.
Great summation, Shirley. I was also very familiar with this historical story, but having these very concrete characters and their individual experiences to relate the history to was wonderful. I agree about Dick. He knows he is a dinosaur. I loved his attitude toward the changes and the people that bring them. He harbors nothing of resentment. I'm anxious to get to the next book and see where his journey leads him. I hope there is a last place of happiness he can find before the encroachment leaves nothing of the past and no place to go.
I love the way this story is bittersweet. I felt a kind of wrenching sadness for the old ways and freedoms that were lost and yet a great pride in the courageous people who were moving forward and conquering this land. Always the dilemma--we love the untouched land, but then we also want to live there.
I love the way this story is bittersweet. I felt a kind of wrenching sadness for the old ways and freedoms that were lost and yet a great pride in the courageous people who were moving forward and conquering this land. Always the dilemma--we love the untouched land, but then we also want to live there.

Yes! Exactly, Sara! Your thoughts are exactly how I felt. I also hope that Dick Summers finds a place that will bring him joy.
I love the way this story is bittersweet. I felt a kind of wrenching sadness for the old ways and freedoms that were lost and yet a great pride in the courageous people who were moving forward and conquering this land. Always the dilemma--we love the untouched land, but then we also want to live there.This is so true, Sara! Summers and Evans both went on this journey, each pursuing his own dream. Evans found it; Summers did not - which for me, also made this story very bittersweet. But true to Summers' character, he did not feel sorry for himself and give up his dream completely. Instead, he went back to the few vestiges of the past he thought he might find. Gotta love that man!

I ordered Fair Land, Fair Land today. Okay, cowgirls, let’s do it!"
Thank you, Terry! This has been a great reading experience with you and the others in this Buddy Read. And yes... westward ho! Your cowgirls comment had me laughing out loud!

As a landscape architect, I am very aware that we have very little wild land left. Even our national forests and lands are logged and ranched. Where I grew up in the Sierras, with Tahoe national forest on the other side of my back yard, there were roads and trails and cabins —marks of man. Everywhere I have practiced, there is no virgin soil. Consequently, when people ask for native landscapes, it is difficult if not impossible to achieve them, because they depend upon a substructure that no longer exists.
In the next one, I wonder if Summers will find Teal Eye. Like Sue, I hated the way that The Big Sky ended. And I somewhat wish I took the books in the order that Sara has read them, starting with The Way West.

As a landscape architect, I am..."
It is frustrating, isn't it, Terry, to no longer be able to visualize what parts of our country looked like before man's encroachment! Here in the South, we are still fairly lucky because so much is still rural. I love our swamps and wetlands here in south Louisiana, but I get so frustrated when developers are able to come in and pave big subdivisions on land that is supposed to be protected wetlands by "paying" the powers that be for its replacement. As if you can replace wetlands! As a consequence, we're losing our wetlands, and flooding is a perennial problem.
I'm hoping The Big Sky comes in this weekend, so I can read it before we start reading Fair Land, Fair Land together on June 15. This Buddy Read has been one of the best discussions I have participated in on Goodreads, and I'm not quite ready to call "Woa, little dogies" on it. 😄
When I was a kid, my dad would take us fishing on the Chattahoochee. We'd just go to a spot and sit with poles in the water and be lazy (I always took a book). No one ever challenged us and we seldom caught anything. I can only remember eating the fish we caught at the lake, not at the river. Still, today it is prohibited. If you sit on the bank you are trespassing (provided you can find a bank to sit on anymore), if you put a pole in the water without a permit, you are breaking the law. There is little of nature that we are allowed to commune with without planning anymore. And, as with the failure to protect the wetlands, Shirley, it is all about money and little else.
I'm glad you will be reading The Big Sky before going on. I suspect that anyone who hasn't will not enjoy Fair Land as much, for Boone and Teal Eye are in it and you would not know their stories at all.
Terry - Reading the stories out of sequence was a good mistake, I think.
I'm glad you will be reading The Big Sky before going on. I suspect that anyone who hasn't will not enjoy Fair Land as much, for Boone and Teal Eye are in it and you would not know their stories at all.
Terry - Reading the stories out of sequence was a good mistake, I think.

No worries, Sara! Thanks for the heads up. I hope to start tomorrow. Finishing up Wives and Daughters first. I'm excited to read The Big Sky!

Dick's realization about things changing is sad but it's true. Going back home to visit my parents where I grew up will never be the same now that it was when I was a young child and teenager. I go back with different eyes, eyes that have experienced life and different places of the US and the world and nothing at home will ever be as grand as it was when I was young.

I know! It is sad, isn't it, Sara? I'm sure you have such fond memories of those lazy days along the Chattahoochee. But those days, too, of hunting and gathering for the family (without a steep license fee) are in the past. Yes... it is all about the money.
I may try to find The Big Sky on the archive.org website you mentioned, if my library book doesn't come in this weekend. Thank you for letting us know about that resource. I had never heard of it before.

Dick's realization about things chan..."
This is all so true, Lori! I have lived in many places in my life (in France, Germany, many states in the US), and when I've thought how nice it would be to go back and visit some of these places, I do a Google Maps search and cannot believe the physical changes that have taken place since I left. I know I would rather remember these places as I knew them then. I thought the same things you did when I was contemplating Dick's place in his new world.
It's funny really when you think how slowly the world changed for thousands of years, and then in the span of a couple of hundred years, the world changed, and is continuing to change, at such a rapid pace, that each generation is now experiencing a totally different world.
My goodness, that is so true, Shirley. The rate of change has gained speed until it is a blur. I used to think about my grandfather going from a world of with horses and carriages to the invention of the car and airplane and living to see a man on the moon. I thought he saw more change than I ever would, but I think technology has opened the world up in ways we could never have imagined and just the fact that we are having this conversation over the net is unbelievable!
Lori, you cannot even find the town I grew up in any more. They have literally built a city over the top of it, rerouted the roads and buried my history. I know what you mean about its being different when you go home, though, it is that way for all of us. What was really strange was when I lost my parents and didn't have a "home" to go to anymore.
Lori, you cannot even find the town I grew up in any more. They have literally built a city over the top of it, rerouted the roads and buried my history. I know what you mean about its being different when you go home, though, it is that way for all of us. What was really strange was when I lost my parents and didn't have a "home" to go to anymore.

As a landscape architect, I am..."
I'm hoping that Teal Eye is given more character development in Fair Fair Land Terry. I've already softened some on The Big Sky and hope to more afer FFL. I agree that it's best to read The Big Sky after The Way West but before Fair Fair Land.

How tragic, Sara, to have lost your parents and your home to time and "progress." When you said, They have literally built a city over the top of it, rerouted the roads and buried my history..., I immediately thought of Dombey and Son that we read together, and how the railroad displaced so many people. Progress has indeed taken a great human toll.
What a lovely correlation, Shirley. I had not thought about it, but it truly is the same thing. Something is lost whenever great expansion is made, we always call it "progress" but I'm not sure it always is. I could really relate to Dick Summers feelings in both these novels. He is at an age where he sees his world disappearing. I have reached a similar age. My grandchildren live lives that have no resemblance to my own, and I realize mine had little resemblance to my grandmother's.
Dick Summers: “God was mighty mean in some ways, letting a body get on to a point where he always hungered to turn back, making him know he wasn’t the man he had been, making his bed cold but keeping in his mind the time when it wasn’t. It was like a man was pushed backwards downhill, seeing the top getting farther from him every day, but always seeing it, always wishing he could go back. Sometimes God seemed pretty small.”
Dick Summers: “God was mighty mean in some ways, letting a body get on to a point where he always hungered to turn back, making him know he wasn’t the man he had been, making his bed cold but keeping in his mind the time when it wasn’t. It was like a man was pushed backwards downhill, seeing the top getting farther from him every day, but always seeing it, always wishing he could go back. Sometimes God seemed pretty small.”
Love your thoughts on this, Lori, especially regarding the animals and Boone. I had not thought of it in those terms, but I feel you are 100% right. It strikes me that (view spoiler)
So glad you liked this. I think we might have profited from reading them out of order. What do you think?
So glad you liked this. I think we might have profited from reading them out of order. What do you think?

Dick was very much the same in both books, but we saw him in his element - hunting and trapping and learning the Indian ways and befriending them. These experiences made him the Dick he was though older and wiser in The Way West and the perfect person to take the people to Oregon.
What about you Sara?
You have expressed exactly my feelings, Lori. It was lovely to step back in time and see where Dick had come from and also made his reflections about his age have even more meaning. That final encounter with Boone also made me understand why Dick was thinking about his life before and wanting to go back into the wild after he had parted from the settlers. Dick is a marvelous character, and his story is really the story of the country. There is nothing about the western development that isn't within his personal experience.

Great observation, Lori. I agree, and you are right that Boone was very like his father. How sad is that?

I'll try to fit that in before we start on Fair, Fair Land Lori.

message 148:
by
Sara, Old School Classics
(last edited Jun 09, 2021 12:09PM)
(new)
-
rated it 5 stars
I have begun Fair Land, Fair Land. I had meant to only read a couple of chapters, but there is not walking away from Guthrie once you begin. I am so happy to be back in Dick Summers' company.
This spoiler through Chapter 25:(view spoiler)
Just a few random thoughts flung out there. I am excited to
discuss this in detail with you all! I am putting A.B. Guthrie on my list of writers you absolutely, positively must read.
This spoiler through Chapter 25:(view spoiler)
Just a few random thoughts flung out there. I am excited to
discuss this in detail with you all! I am putting A.B. Guthrie on my list of writers you absolutely, positively must read.
Books mentioned in this topic
A Confederacy of Dunces (other topics)These Thousand Hills (other topics)
The Town (31) (other topics)
The Trees (29) (other topics)
The Fields (30) (other topics)
More...
Authors mentioned in this topic
Conrad Richter (other topics)Ken Kesey (other topics)
Julie Fanselow (other topics)
U.S. National Park Service (other topics)
A.B. Guthrie Jr. (other topics)
More...
Do those ebooks work on Kindle?