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Lonesome Dove

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Lonesome Dove, written by Larry McMurtry, is a Pulitzer Prize-winning western novel and the first published book of the Lonesome Dove series.

Plot introduction

The story follows the lives of retired Texas Rangers and cohorts as they drive cattle across the country to the unsettled lands of Montana. The book was filmed as a television miniseries in 1989. It starred Robert Duvall as Augustus McCrae, Tommy Lee Jones as Woodrow F. Call, Diane Lane as Lorena Wood, Anjelica Huston as Clara Allen, Danny Glover as Joshua Deets, Rick Schroder as Newt Dobbs, Robert Urich as Jake Spoon and D.B. Sweeney as Dishwater Boggett. The series was awarded six Emmy Awards and was nominated for 13 others.

Origins

McMurtry originally developed the tale in 1972 as a theatrical motion picture entitled The Streets of Laredo (a title later used for the sequel), which was to have starred John Wayne, Henry Fonda, and James Stewart, and directed by Peter Bogdanovich. When plans fell through, the original screenplay went into limbo. McMurtry later resurrected the unproduced screenplay as a full-length novel, which became a best seller and won the 1986 Pulitzer Prize for Fiction. The mini-series is considered by many to be one of the finest westerns ever made.

Plot Summary

The story focuses on the relationship of several retired Texas Rangers and their adventures driving a cattle herd from Texas to Montana.

Two of them, Captain Augustus "Gus" McCrae and Captain Woodrow F. Call, run a ranch in the small Texas town of Lonesome Dove. McCrae is a romantic figure whose happy-go-lucky nature and good fortune with women prohibits him from doing any real work around the farm. Call, however, is a no-nonsense, hard-working taskmaster who tolerates very little and McCrae even less. Working with them are Joshua Deets, a black man who is an excellent tracker and scout, Pea-Eye Parker, another former Ranger, and Bolivar, a retired Mexican bandit who is their cook. They adopted Newt, a boy who may be Call's illegitimate son by a prostitute named Maggie, after his mother died; at the time of the story, Newt is seventeen. Call, dedicated to raising the boy, does not admit to anyone, least of all himself, that he is Newt's father. Call and McCrae's old friend and fellow Ranger, Jake Spoon, is a ladies' man and gambler. While in Fort Smith, Arkansas, Jake fired upon another player who assaulted him, but accidentally killed a dentist, who was also the mayor, and whose brother, July Johnson, is the sheriff.

Jake returns with Deets to Lonesome Dove to evade Johnson, who is under pressure from his sister-in-law to bring Spoon to trial, despite the accidental nature of his brother's death. Reunited with McCrae and Call, his description of Montana inspires Call to gather a herd of cattle and drive them to Montana. Call is attracted to the romantic notion of finally having something to do besides sitting idly at home and of being able to see one of the last pieces of untamed land before the end of the Old West.

Characters in \"Lonesome Dove\"

Allusions/references to actual history and current science

According to McMurtry, Gus and Call were not modeled after historical characters, but there are similarities with real-life cattle drivers Oliver Loving and Charles Goodnight. When Goodnight and Loving's guide, Bose Ikard, died, Goodnight carved a wooden tombstone for him, just as Call does for Deets. Upon Loving's death, Goodnight brought him home to be buried in Texas, just as Call does for Augustus. (Goodnight himself appears as a minor but sympathetic character in this novel, more so in the sequel, Streets of Laredo.)

Other books of the Lonesome Dove series feature more prominent historical events (the Santa Fe Expedition, Comanche raid) and characters (Buffalo Hump, John Wesley Hardin, Judge Roy Bean)

Lonesome Dove exists as a Baptist church and cemetery in Southlake, Texas.

Awards and nominations

Trivia

Publication sequence is not the same as narrative sequence.

References

External links

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