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Lonesome Dove
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Initial Impressions: Lonesome Dove by Larry McMurtry-June/July 2021
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Diane, "Miss Scarlett"
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rated it 5 stars
Jun 15, 2021 12:22PM

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For those of you who loved Duvall in the miniseries I highly recommend this miniseries which reminded me of his work as Gus.
https://vimeo.com/201192621

For those of you who loved Duvall in the miniseries I highly recommend this miniseries which reminded me of his work as Gus.
https://vimeo.com/20119..."
Cathrine, I had forgotten about this--but it was magnificent as well. I find that anything Duvall does is generally first rate. One of my favorite actors.
Cathrine ☯️ wrote: "🥕s and radishes were not in the movie 😂"
Now that's a darn shame because that was funny.
Now that's a darn shame because that was funny.

I remember my mother commenting about HER mother (my grandmother): She was born in the era of horse and wagon and lived to see a man walk on the moon! Talk about change!

I gave my grandmother one of those memory books to fill out many years ago. She dutifully answered all the questions which formed a biography of sorts. One question was "What invention in your lifetime was most important to you?" I was thinking, cars, planes, washing machines. etc. Her answer: Electricity. She was born in 1898 in the Appalachians, so they didn't get electricity until Roosevelt's WPA project gave it to them.

It is a lovely thing Sara. Another question was about the most surprising thing she found out about my grandfather after they were married. She said if she had known what a baby he was she would never have married him. That was priceless.

I think if were me, electricity would have been top of the list and second to that a washing machine.
Y’all, I’m reading your comments and then stopped bc I’m no where close to your longer discussions. I promise I’m still here but only at chapter 20.
I liked the driving analogy to reading this book. I think the author is brilliant how he’s weaving this book together. I am not smart enough to recognize the foreshadowing of what or how this book will end
I liked the driving analogy to reading this book. I think the author is brilliant how he’s weaving this book together. I am not smart enough to recognize the foreshadowing of what or how this book will end
You couldn't guess if you tried Laura. Just like the plains, it wanders all over the place, but encompasses so much.
Oh good lord…..the snakes. John Ehle’s Land Breakers has a very memorable snake scene too.
And agree with diane…..love the animals and their names in this story.
And agree with diane…..love the animals and their names in this story.
OK here we go. I've loved all your chat and it made me realise that life is too short to make excuses. Lonesome Dove just looked too big, I work 50hrs a week, no can do. Reading your reviews made me think again. So I'm in and I'm loving it, albeit 4 chapters down the line. The humour has got to me, it's like spending a night drinking with Irish folk. The next time someone says to me they don't have the time to read I'll buy them a copy of Lonesome Dove.

Yes Dave. Fastest 900 page book I ever read. You have to work, but other things may go by the wayside til you finish.
I've been watching a new Netflix series called "High On the Hog", about the role of enslaved Americans in food choices and preparation. The last episode is about the role of black cowboys, who were actually the first cowboys who drove Texas cattle to Northern markets. The very word "cowboy" come from the slaves who were assigned to take care of the cows and their needs, as in "go milk the cow, boy". Made me think of Deets.
The cowboy stew they made from the organ meats did not look that good to me, but I guess those hungry drovers thought it was pretty fine eating.
The cowboy stew they made from the organ meats did not look that good to me, but I guess those hungry drovers thought it was pretty fine eating.


I'm a farmer/rancher's granddaughter and a butcher's daughter. My dad grew up in the Depression ... they ate everything but the "moo" (or "oink" or "baa"). I will still eat anything that isn't moving too fast .... at least once.
And I absolutely LOVE menudo ... a Mexican tripe stew. yummy.

Love the conversation and can ride on the enthusiasm!
Diane I’m with you it’s crazy that the same characters keep running into each other over such a vast area. Some of them are just train wrecks. I don’t like Jake at all. I’m not to part 3 but I’m close.
I'm really glad we took 2 months to read this one, and I think this may be one of the best discussion threads we have had in this group. Jake is not a good man at all, but I imagine that his kind was not at all unusual in that time and place.
Jake is not a good man but at the same time everything he does is not shocking, but expected from this reader.
And I need every bit of that 2 months and hopefully not more. 😉
Again, this book proves how excellent of a story teller McMurtry was.
And I need every bit of that 2 months and hopefully not more. 😉
Again, this book proves how excellent of a story teller McMurtry was.


Sue, all of these men seem to be very accepting of the others, regardless of their failings. What counted was how they could be depended on in a crisis.

Is it too late to comment here? I feel like a right slow coach. After I picked up Lonesome Dove ( this always happens) I started editing a documentary for the BBC which turned into a nightmare of a job. I was lucky if I could read 3-4 pages per day. But I was gripped and I couldn't get enough of it. I made it to PART 2, got introduced to July Johnson and decided that life is too short. So I quit my job at the BBC (I'm freelance) so I can dedicate the next few weeks to enjoying this journey.

Keep letting us know what you think.

What I love about Lonesome Dove is everything. It's funny, smart, engaging. Unlike anything I've read before. The BBC can fuck off, this is my book now. Apologies for my English.
I finished a few days ago. Part 3 flies by. I’ve been so busy I had not gotten back on thread. Let me catch up on newer comments.
Way to go Dave! I'm sure Larry McMurtry would be proud. Heck, I'm proud of you. Quitting a job to devote more time to a book is a super hero thing to do, in my opinion.

Awe, thanks for your support. I've worked for the BBC on and off for the last 30 years. Strange people. I'm not privately educated so I don't really fit in. A choice between them and Larry McMurty is a no brainer to be honest. And this is a very special book.
Books mentioned in this topic
The Land Breakers (other topics)Comanche Moon (other topics)
Lonesome Dove (other topics)
Comanche Moon (other topics)
Dead Man's Walk (other topics)