That Wild Wild West

Westerns are not my bag. They cover a very short piece of history (usually post-Civil War to the early 1900’s), they’re often trite, and too many of them bore me. You can run down a checklist for almost every one: Horse? Check. Damsel? Check. Angry Indian? Check. Sheriff?  Check. Big shootout? Check.

Clichéd

No doubt, much of my boredom has to do with Hollywood Westerns. Though I’ve never seen the entire Terror of Tiny Town, I’ve suffered a few westerns. I did like Tombstone, and the remake of True Grit, Young Guns, Maverick, and yes, I admit, I did enjoy The Lone Ranger – three times. Maybe I’m un-American, but I can’t stand John Wayne or his films, and while I was excited to watch High Noon (it was mentioned in the TV show M*A*S*H*, and actor Harry Morgan appeared in both), it was a terribly disappointing, tragically dull film to someone used to modern Hollywood. It turned me off from ever attempting My Darling Clementine or Shootout at the OK Corral. So while I can handle modern westerns, those old classic hallmarks aren’t found on my shelves.

Nor had I ever read a real “Western,” although a couple of Best-Western Literature lists include children’s books like the Little House on the Prairie series, as well as Old Yeller (you could probably throw in Young Pioneers, Caddie Woodlawn, Seven Alone, and the sequel to Old Yeller, Savage Sam), and those I loved just fine. If you read through twenty different lists of what’s considered the best of Old West literature, you’ll find ten books are on every list, so let’s call them the Best Westerns of Literature (not to be confused with Best Western, the hotel, or Western Lit as opposed to Asian):

The Virginian – Owen Wister
Hondo – Louis L’Amour
Lonesome Dove – Larry McMurtry
True Grit – Charles Portis
All the Pretty Horses – Cormac McCarthy
The Shootist – Glendon Swarthout
Riders of the Purple Sage – Zane Grey
The Time it Never Rained – Elmer Kelton
The Ox-Bow Incident – Walter Van Tildenberg Clark
Shane – Jack Schaefer

Fresh and Award-Winning

I could have lived the rest of my life just fine without Westerns, except for one thing: someone I knew was writing one. I’ve seen Howard Weinstein for many years at various conventions, attended some of his writing workshops, and we know each other at least in passing. Howard’s written more than 18 books, from science fiction to dog training to Mickey Mantle, and some 65 comic books. To make sure he got it right, he visited several of the places he wrote about, making sure he got the details, and over a year or more I listened to him talk about his work and read excerpts from it. It was interesting, but… It was a western.

Galloway’s Gamble was published last September, and now it’s won an award: The Western Fictioneers Peacemaker Award for Best First Western Novel. So I had a quandary: support a fellow writer in his award-winning endeavor, or ignore his success on a project he loved dearly. I thought I’d done my duty by having the library order a copy, but I buckled down and opened my first western.

photo courtesy of Howard Weinstein

Galloway’s Gamble is the story of Jake and Jamey Galloway, two brothers who shift about aimlessly looking to find their purpose and not doing well at it. They join the Civil War too late, they miss marrying the girls they had their eyes on, they get taken by a cheating card shark, and horse-shy Jake just can’t manage to hang onto a hat. Yet, little by little, they take steps and missteps to change their fortune, and wind up trying to save their little Texas hometown from the villainous cattle baron Wilhelm Krieg and the corrupt banker Silas Atwood. 

As a western, I can’t judge Galloway’s Gamble, since I’ve read nothing to compare it to, but winning an award is pretty good sign. As a novel, you certainly don’t have to like westerns to enjoy it. The story of the Galloway brothers is a timeless tale of the little man against the powerful, with a cast of characters that never lets you walk away for long – you have to pick it back up and find out what happens. While the influence of films like Maverick is evident (which is not a bad thing), there isn’t an overwhelming number of bullets, horses, swaggering men in hats, and no cliché’d slang that could be a turn-off to the casual reader. Instead, you get a solid, interesting story that just happens to take place in the late 1800’s.

Give it a try. If you like it (and I’m sure you will), you might find some of the classic westerns to your liking, too. I think I’m going to go watch Maverick again.

3 thoughts on “That Wild Wild West

  1. Whoa there! I don’t often read Westerns, but you missed a couple of great ones! Your 10 best list is very good and includes my favorite, Lonesome Dove, but…try Elmore Leonard’s Westerns like Hombre and The Complete Western Stories of Elmore Leonard to see what a master can accomplish.

    Westerns, both books and films, are at their best when they tell moral tales and when they mine the nostalgic impulses of the American spirit toward independence. By the way, you shouldn’t give up on great Hollywood Westerns because they’re not modern Hollywood. Stop watching Maverick unless its the TV series, and Gunfight at the OK Corral is rather mediocre. Arguably Hollywood abandoned Westerns and forgot how to make them. IBut if you miss the early history of film, it’s like missing the great novels of literature. Sure, the style has changed, but without the tradition, you lack context. You need may need a different film vocabulary to watch My Darling Clementine but it is definitely worth the watch. Any Western movie fan must watch the films of Anthony Mann like The Naked Spur with James Stewart and Budd Boetticher films like The Tall T starring Randolph Scott. I hate John Wayne, too. But The Searchers and True Grit are superior films. If you need a more modern approach, see The Outlaw Josey Wales, Quigley Down Under, The Professionals, Ride the High Country, The Wild Bunch, The Magnificent Seven, The Good, the Bad, and The Ugly, The Unforgiven, Silverado and Open Range (both with Kevin Costner) and many others. Many films were made from the books of Elmore Leonard, the best of which is probably Hombre with Paul Newman. These films are a lot more than horse, damsel, and gunfight!

    Like

    • Thanks for the input! I’ve seen the remake of The Magnificent Seven, and The Good, The Bad, and the Ugly is already on my to-watch list. You’ve given me some new food for thought! – Susan O.

      Like

Leave a comment