Reviews

Horseman, Pass By by Larry McMurtry

jcoryv's review

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5.0

What a fantastic little book. Simple, honest, powerful, real.

connorstory's review

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Everyone needs their own special amount of toil in this life.

The narrator is an obvious surrogate for McMurtry and consequently sometimes lacks a specificity of character, for if you are writing as yourself, you sometimes forget to tell the reader who you are because you already know.

kcrouth's review

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4.0

Having seen the film "Hud" recently, I wanted to experience the story on which it was based. I just completed reading McMurtry's travel book entitled "Roads" and had an idea of the setting for this story. "Horseman, Pass By" is a richly layered and textured story of life on a ranch in central Texas, near the fictional town of Thalia, which based on the town where McMurtry grew up. The characters are 3D and real, their conversations feel authentic, especially compared to my similar rural early years in the Ozarks of Missouri. The personal dynamics between the family members, ranch hands and towns folk all feel as if they were real. The descriptions of the country and landscape are as picturesque as words can make them. The story is told by the teenage grandson of the family patriarch. Step-parents and siblings add to the complication of the relationships and color of the story. Based on my rich experience with this book and the film, I want to read the remaining two books that complete what is informally known as the Thalia Trilogy, the last of which is "The Last Picture Show", which was made into another excellent film. McMurtry's writing and story telling is warm and rich, which makes for a great reading experience.

magena's review

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3.0

This is the book that inspired my favorite Paul Newman movie, "Hud". If you didn't like the movie, you probably won't like the book. I enjoyed the movie more, but only because of Mr. Newman.

vorpalblad's review

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4.0

Proof that good writing doesn't mean you can't write screenplays, and bestsellers too. This is neither but it is strong.

maryehavens's review

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4.0

Woof.
It took me a while to finish this less than 200 pager because it’s hyper-depressing. A lot of loss of life expectations and feelings of being trapped in your situation. It ends just as depressing but it’s a fantastic ending. I wanted to cry.
I was interested in this story because I watched the movie Hud a long time ago. I don’t remember much of it except that Patricia Neal won Best Supporting Actress and there was a feeling of helplessness. That feeling is times ten in the novel.
Hud is like a black hole that causes complications everywhere he goes. He’s selfish and causes trouble but he’s not the main cause of the trouble - a changing world is the main problem. And that’s the point of this whole novel. When your way of life starts becoming irrelevant, what are you to do?
It took me a while to get through this - it’s hard to read such grim reality. But I’m glad I stuck with it for the ending alone. Good stuff.

horthhill's review

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5.0

Larry McMurtry’s “Horseman, Pass By” is a western and a coming-of-age story set in Texas at a specific time: July 1954. Lonnie, a seventeen year-old, lives with his grand-father and step-grand-mother, and much older step-brother, Hud, on a large ranch. His grand-father is eighty-six and still actively working. He’s a cattleman of the old west: a man of great integrity and past. Hud is wild and grasping: a man whose behaviour presages an ominous future. Lonnie finds himself pulled between these two dominating men and the west they represent. He’s disposition is inclined to his grand-father but Hud’s world seems attractive. Within a month, a catastrophe strikes the ranch. Lonnie strikes out on his own, but where he goes is left uncertain.

marknitka's review

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4.0

Solid quick read any western fan will enjoy.

wirtless's review

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4.0

☹️

mariavazquezsolaun's review against another edition

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3,5 (casi 4 )

No fui consciente de que Hud, el salvaje me había atrapado hasta que ante una escena muy concreta me descubrí sintiendo una enorme tristeza. Yo, que pensaba hasta el momento que la historia me estaba siendo ajena me di cuenta de repente que no solo necesitaba conocer el destino de cada uno de los personajes, sino que, además, necesitaba confiar en que sería bueno aun cuando era bastante evidente que no sería así.

Creo que la culpa de esa pesadumbre que me invadía en la primera mitad de esta novela la tiene su autor, Larry McMurtry, que logra que ese ambiente rutinario y cargado de desesperanza que se respira en el pequeño pueblo del viejo oeste al que nos traslada, te contagie. Allí, alejados del pueblo y en un rancho vive el joven narrador de esta historia, su abuelo, un ya viejo vaquero, la mujer de éste y su hijo Hud, el salvaje. Además de otros personajes entrañables como Almea, la cocinera negra de cuyo personaje me he enamorado.

Hud, el salvaje, nos narra el día a día en el rancho con un ritmo pausado y con la mirada de un adolescente. Así descubrimos el amor del abuelo por su oficio y el de un nieto por su abuelo. El hastío y odio de un hijo que aspira a hacer las cosas a su manera. La fatiga de una mujer que nunca se ha sentido a gusto en su papel. La angustia, el dolor y si, también el orgullo de quien dice basta al machismo y racismo que la agraden. Y la desesperanza general de todo un pueblo que no ve un futuro, que trabaja y aun así no logra lo que ansía.

"Todos ellos buscaban algo más y sin embargo parecían obtener cada vez menos; buscaban emociones fuertes o una chica a la que cortejar, y acababan pisoteados por un toro o tirados en una cuneta. Ansiaran lo que ansiaran, al final tenían que pasarse sin ello."

Descorazonadora, triste y también un poco salvaje, así definiría esta novela en la que no parece que pasa nada mas allá de la vida hasta que pasa. Y lo que pasa casi nunca es bueno.