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Comanche Moon |
List Price: $49.95
Your Price: $31.47 |
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Product Info |
Reviews |
Rating: Summary: A very good book. Although Lonesome Dove is hard to top. Review: Im interrested in Inish Scull. Was he a real person or a fictional character. I would love to see this in Movie form with Tommy Lee Jones and Robert Duvall.
Rating: Summary: Worthwhile, though not gripping Review: Perhaps it is unfair to judge a book against a classic such as Lonesome Dove, however this is a hazard faced by writers of sequels (or in this case prequels). While much of the book was fascinating, such as those parts dealing with Inish Scull, Ahumado, Blue Duck and Buffalo Hump, it almost seems that McMurtry has run out of interesting things to say about Call and McCrae. While Lonesome Dove captivates from the start, Comanche Moon, like most good but not great books, allowed me to start feeling drowzy around midnight. Certainly this is a worthwhile book and at 700+ pages, it is well worth the price.
Rating: Summary: Comanche Moon, good but not consistent. Review: I loved Lonesome Dove. I also enjoyed the sequals(and prequals). I found that I could hardly put Comanche Moon down. It is a good book but be forewarned if you are a stickler for details, you may be disappointed. There are too many inconsistencies.
Rating: Summary: Audio Review Review: I read/listen to everything that McMurtry writes. Previous audio cassettes of his work were very good. The narrator of this work ruins it. He seems more impressed with tonal quality and over working the narrative. Occasionally he forgets to over act and the quality of the book comes through. I hope the publisher goes back to one of the narrators used on previous tapes.
Rating: Summary: Better than "Streets of Laredo" and "Dead Man's Walk" Review: I am a big McMurtry fan and was very excited to see this published. But, I was a little more than disappointed. I guess "Lonesome Dove" is a tough act to follow. With this novel, McMurtry tries to set the action for "Lonesome Dove". But, there are still many questions that are not answered. Such as, why is Call always so stoic and literal. Why is he this way? There is no section on how Call felt after he learned of Maggie's death. Since a great deal is spent on their relationship, or lack thereof, it would have added a few more pages but, heh, at 750 + what's a few more? The "rangering" sections are still top form. I particularly loved the sections on the Indians and their relationship to the gods and the earth. Buffalo Hump's characterization is probably the best in the novel. McMurtry does set up Blue Duck as one mean SOB. I had trouble putting it down but was not compelled to feel I had to read it in one sitting. But, a big thanks must go out to McMurtry for bringing these wonderful characters back into our world again.
Rating: Summary: For lover's of American Indian tales....this is a "keeper" Review: The fierce Commanche warrior Hunter Wolf is chosen by his people to cross the western wilderness in search of the elusive maiden who would fulfill thier sacred prophecy. He finds and captures Loretta Simpson, a proud golden-haired beauty who swears to defy her captor. What she doesn't realize is that she and Hunter are bound by destiny. When she is finally convinced of her love for Hunter she is given a wedding present by her lover's jealous enemy. It is a comb that belonged to her mother. Realizing that Hunter's tribe was responsible for killing her mother, she runs away. She can never stay with those that killed her family. Hunter goes after her.
Rating: Summary: A worthy prequel to the classic Lonesome Dove Review: "Comanche Moon" is described as the final volume of the "Lonesome Dove" saga although chronologically it is the second of the four novels, taking place between "Dead Man's Walk" and "Lonesome Dove". Readers of the other volumes in series will encounter familiar names here: Woodrow Call and Gus McCrae, of course, but also Jake Spoon and Pea Eye Parker and Deets of "Dove", Long Bill Coleman and Buffalo Hump of "Walk", Famous Shoes and Charlie Goodnight of "Streets of Laredo" and others. As has become increasingly evident in his novels, McMurtry is not concerned with presenting a story of the West correct in all the minor historical details. For example, in "Comanche Moon" we find one character armed with a Winchester rifle 10 years before that weapon's introduction. Instead, his aim appears to be to create a story of about four parts gritty realism and one part romantic myth - and in "Comanche Moon" he achieves success. The novel abounds with characters more extravagant, larger-than-life personalities, yet these people are true to the story McMurtry is telling. Captain Inish Scull of the Texas Rangers and his wife, Inez, and the "Black Vaquero" Ahumado are unlikely to have had close real-life models, but in "Comanche Moon" they are forceful, fascinating figures. As is usual, McMurtry's characters are driven by their own obsessions. If I might sum up the theme of this novel, and much else of McMurtry's fiction, I would say that it would be "times change, people don't" - and not just "people" in the larger sense, but people as individuals, holding true to their own particular, narrow view of how they should live their lives. Characters like Woodrow Call and Inish Scull and Buffalo Hump are admirable because of their great integrity, no matter what destruction they seed while pursuing their individual visions of what is right. In "Comanche Moon", McMurtry's Indian characters - the Comanche Buffalo Hump and Kicking Wolf and the Kickapoo Famous Shoes - are perhaps more finely drawn than in any of the other Lonesome Dove books. They are not merely white men wearing paint and feathers. They live and die by their own logic, as alien as that system of belief may seem to a late Twentieth Century reader. Although any judgment must be subjective, I would rate "Comanche Moon" as at least the equal of "Streets of Laredo" and better than "Dead Man's Walk", although not so high as the magnificent "Lonesome Dove". I know that part of my enjoyment of the novel is my familiarity with several of the major characters, and my advice to any reader new to the "Lonesome Dove" saga would be to read the books in their order of publication rather than their chronological order of internal dates.
Rating: Summary: A real page turner. Review: This book is wonderful. It's about the rise and fall of powerful leaders and the demise of the Indian way of life. My favorite part of the book is the end of Chapter 31 in Book III, when the great white snow owl flies near the face of Famous Shoes, the scout and tracker for the Rangers. Famous Shoes is more frightened than he's ever been before in his life because the white owl means death-the death of a great man. Gus's cheerful comment about the owl being a "right pretty" bird is priceless. I've read the end of that chapter quite a few times because it's so powerful... "Famous Shoes realized then, when he heard Captain McCrae's casual and cheerful tone, that it was as he had always believed, which was that it was no use talking to white men about serious things. The owl of death, the most imposing and important bird he had ever seen, had flown right over the two captains' heads, and they merely thought it was a pretty bird. If he tried to persuade them that the bird had come out of the earth, where the death spirits lived, they would just think he was talking nonsense. Captain Call was no more bothered by the owl than Captain McCrae, a fact which made Famous Shoes decide not to speak. He turned and led them west again, but this time he proceeded very carefully, expecting that Blue Duck might be laying his ambush somewhere not far ahead, in a hole that one would not notice until it was too late." A short time later the white owl was spotted by Buffalo Hump as he was preparing for his death. The Indian characters were brought to life in this book. I was awed by them. Who would have thought a western could be so much fun to read!
Rating: Summary: Encompasses the spirit of the wild west. Review: Like all of Larry McMurtry's books, "Comanche Moon" truly caprtures the spirit of the wild, wild west. Through his descriptive and often thrilling narrative, you can get a sense of what it really must have been like back then-from the vast and breathtaking landscape to the hardships that comprised every day life. At once you'll be touched by the innocent and sweet way that men act towards the women that they fancy, and horrified by the extreme cruelty and violence of which they are capable. And for anyone who has enjoyed "Dead Man's Walk," "Lonesome Dove," and "Streets of Laredo," "Comanche Moon" is a must read. This book fills in any and all gaps left in the other three novels. Picking up where "Dead Man's Walk" leaves off, this books takes us through the middle years of the character's lives. You learn what really happened with Gus and Clara. This is your chance to meet Maggie, Call's one and only love, and Newt's mother. If you want to truly know and understand these characters, this volume is a necessity. But whether you are an avid McMurtry fan, or this is your first experience with him, "Comanche Moon" is a first rate, highly enjoyble yarn.
Rating: Summary: "Bible and sword!" Review: This is kind of a mixed bag and if you view the Pulitzer Prize winning "Lonesome Dove" as sacrosanct, you'll probably want to avoid it. But if you just want to spend a little more time with Gus, Call, Deets, Jake Spoon, Blue Duck and my favorite character, the Kickapoo tracker Famous Shoes, then prepare to kick back for a while.
"Comanche Moon" has two things working against it right off the bat. First of all, it falls chronologically between two better known novels and it's straight-jacketed by the fact that we already know very well what happens to most of the characters. That limits the ability of what McMurtry can do and while it makes, say, Jake Spoon's boyhood actions more poignant because we know where he eventually ends up, it also means that when Blue Duck wades in to fight a duel to the death with a sworn enemy, we know what *won't* happen, because we know Blue's fate, too.
Plus, it extends one of my least favorite aspects of "Lonesome Dove" (Call's tedious and inexplicable disavowal of Maggie and Newt) and since we already know he never claims her as a wife or Newt as a son, a boring issue becomes even more frustrating.
The other problem is that the novel is broken into three parts, or "books." The first establishes Call and Gus in their 30s, patrolling the llano under Capt. Inish Scull and becoming captains themselves. The second covers the Comanches' raid to the sea and Scull's bloody battle of wills with Ahumado, the Black Vaquero. And the third closes the gap and points the way to the opening of "Lonesome Dove."
The reason this is a problem is that Scull's "Book II" struggle against Ahumado is the most interesting part of the story and because of this "Book III" feels like it arrives in the wake of a blown load. McMurtry skims through the Civil War and the rangers' approach to middle age, and as much as I like the characters, it feels a bit anticlimactic.
Nevertheless, it's a worthy entry to the series (and, if McMurtry is still in the mood to write about any of these characters, I seriously would love to see a book solely devoted to Scull or Mr. Shoes). After I finished "Lonesome Dove," I was still in the mindset of these books and plunged right into "Comanche." By the time I finished "Comanche," I realized I'd absorbed over 1600 pages of this material -- no wonder McMurtry sometimes loses track of where Clara is when or how Maggie lived before she died. Sixteen hundred pages and I have half a mind to start on into re-reading "Streets of Laredo."
There's just something fascinating to me about McMurtry's matter-of-fact prose and his plain-phrased approach to the country, violence, sex, horse maintenance, Native Americans (who are presented with respect but without faux-varnish) and just the day-to-day process of living in the 1800's and getting yourself from point A to point B in an age before accurate maps, cell phones, interstates and cruise control.
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