Patrick's Book Talk

A "practice" blog I started, featuring blurb-type reviews of books I've read (or started) recently.

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Location: Elko, Nevada, United States

Wednesday, October 24, 2007

"Buffaloed" and Butchered

This is another great, yet seemingly accidental find. I'd never heard of John Williams, nor his remarkable novel Butcher's Crossing set in the heyday of the buffalo hunter in the American western frontier, until I came across a review of a recent re-release of another of his works, in which a tantalizing summary of this book was included.

Why this title is not better known is surprising. It is quite well written, and presents an amazingly evocative, and involving recreation of a buffalo (okay, Bison) hunt, or more accurately, slaughter. It is shown as a dream, as a kind of work, a source of greed, and ultimately an uncontrollable, manic path of destruction.

Tuesday, October 09, 2007

Brutal, and Brilliant

Although I finished reading this one several weeks ago, it has taken me a while absorb it, to get over the shock of it, you might say. Blood Meridian is often hailed as probably Cormac McCarthy's best work, and it rated third, as I recall, in a recent survey of the best works of fiction in the past twenty-five years in the New York Times Book Review; upon reading it myself, I'd have to agree.

This book has a fairly notorious reputation; many have difficulty getting through its pages, for the constant and unrelenting violence found there. Perhaps more amazing, this brutal tale has much basis in fact - there was an infamous "Glanton gang" that ravaged the southwest territories, into Mexico, around 1850. There was (at least in one participant's account) an individual called Judge Holden, one of the most remarkable, and frightening, characters in American literature, according to one noted critic.