Home :: Books :: Audiocassettes  

Arts & Photography
Audio CDs
Audiocassettes

Biographies & Memoirs
Business & Investing
Children's Books
Christianity
Comics & Graphic Novels
Computers & Internet
Cooking, Food & Wine
Entertainment
Gay & Lesbian
Health, Mind & Body
History
Home & Garden
Horror
Literature & Fiction
Mystery & Thrillers
Nonfiction
Outdoors & Nature
Parenting & Families
Professional & Technical
Reference
Religion & Spirituality
Romance
Science
Science Fiction & Fantasy
Sports
Teens
Travel
Women's Fiction
STREETS OF LAREDO CASSETTE

STREETS OF LAREDO CASSETTE

List Price: $50.00
Your Price:
Product Info Reviews

<< 1 2 >>

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Not Lonesome Dove...but An Excellent Sequel
Review: "Streets of Laredo" is the much-anticipated sequel to Larry McMurtry's finest and most memorable novel, "Lonesome Dove." Because of the quality of the first novel, which ranks among this reader's favorites, almost any follow-up would be disappointing as "Lonesome Dove" is a book that few readers will forget. "Streets of Laredo" suffers from the fact that Gus McCrae, one of the two cantankerous and aging cowboys from "Lonesome Dove", is not present in this book. The repartee and interaction between the voluble McCrae and the taciturn, curmudgeonly Call was one of the great strengths of the first novel and now, in "Streets of Laredo", Call, the less colorful of the duo is at the center of the story. He is hired to track down a Mexican bandit, Joey Garza and along with an Eastern "tenderfoot", a hapless deputy sheriff and "Pea Eye" Parker, one of the secondary characters from "Lonesome Dove", he pursues the bandit across the windswept panhandle, through the hardscrabble Pecos country and into Mexico. McMurtry populates the Streets of Laredo with real life characters drawn from western history including the prolific killer John Wesley Hardin, the cattleman and trailblazer, Charles Goodnight and the colorful Judge Roy Bean who set himself up as "The Law West of the Pecos." In "Streets of Laredo" Woodrow Call is an aging man, not destined for more adventures and so the awkward "Pea Eye" Parker, who is now a husband and a father, married to the beautiful and good hearted whore Lorena, is elevated to a major character, torn between the pull of home and hearth and duty to his comrades. Like most of McMurtry's books about the historic west, this novel is brutal, full of violent deaths. However, it also features strong and beautifully written female characters as the author understands that the plains were not settled by the feint of heart, that it took bold men and resourceful, strong women to tame a wild country. "Streets of Laredo" does not measure up to the preceding "Lonesome Dove" but it is a fine book nonetheless, with a straightforward narrative drive that provides the reader with a compelling and haunting tale of love, loss, duty, pain, and ultimately, redemption.


We beat the drum lowly and shook the spurs slowly,
And bitterly wept as we bore him along;
For we all loved our comrade, so brave and so handsome,
We all loved our comrade, although he's done wrong...
From "Streets of Laredo"
Perhaps the saddest old cowboy song, written about 1860


Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Good story, but not great writing---there is a difference
Review: Call is old. Only a few characters remain from the past. Life has taken it toll, but Call continues to persevere, alone, without Gus. Life is not what we want it to be. But we continue on, doing the best we can. Excellent book. Teaches the aging process, the endurance and plotting forward movement to the end. Many exciting moments, touching, heart-warming, brutal and grim. Life before our eyes as it is. At the end, it's time to begin reading the series of books all over again!
Evelyn Horan - teacher/counselor/author
Jeannie, A Texas Frontier Girl, Book One - Four

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: 547 pages and two audible gasps later, I'm satisfied
Review: I first read the original, Lonesome Dove, and followed those up with the immensely disappointing Dead Man's Walk and the better but still not entirely worthy Comanche Moon, so by the time I began to prepare to approach Streets of Laredo, I was cautious (well obviously, I dragged out the approach pretty good there). I wondered if McMurtry was up to the task of revisiting the characters that have become so dear to me, or if he'd falter like he had in the prequels. And now, barely post-reading, I can say that I think he did a fine job, though I did have a few problems.

Throughout the story I grew more and more suspicious that McMurtry took his story in wild directions, either killing or maiming central characters without a second thought, simply to spite Return to Lonesome Dove, the miniseries sequel that was written and produced without his involvement (and aired prior to the release of this "official" sequel). Certainly, he may have done the unheard of with his characters just to be unpredictable, but I felt a little cheated of closure with characters who I began to consider friends, and the thought that it may have been for no other reason that to set the story apart from the black sheep miniseries, well, it kinda hurt. But whenever I'd begin to feel angry with McMurtry and his murderous ways (he was killing off my friends, man!), I'd get caught up in the story again and endeared with new or expanded characters and begrudgingly forgive him.

So while Streets of Laredo may not do with the Lonesome Dove characters what you hope it will, just trust Larry McMurtry. He knows his characters, he knows what he's doing, and wouldn't we be just as angry with him, or more, if he gave us a pacifying, milquetoast resolution that we'd have seen coming anyway?

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Stands Well On Its Own
Review: I was fortunate enough to read STREETS OF LAREDO before I read LD. I didn't have that built-in "bias" of hoping beyond hope that McMurtry would offer a sequel as mesmerizing as his Pulitizer-prize winning masterpiece--a bias that seems to have disappointed so many of the reviewers on this site who can't help but compare the two books.

Fact is, this is a gripping, brutal Western. STREETS OF LAREDO gives the reader a vast array of complex, interesting characters: Woodrow F. Call, the aging former lawman turned bounty hunter, who realizes he is well past his prime...Pea Eye Parker, torn between his devotion to his family and his undying loyalty to Call...Lorena Parker, once a prostitute, now a wife, mother, and schoolteacher, who sets out in the face of overwhelming danger to find her husband...Mr. Brookshire, a railroad accountant from New York and traveling companion of Call, who is appalled at the brutality of the West...Maria, whose hatred of Call and concern for her killer son cannot overcome a true heart of gold. Throw in two chilling, ruthless killers--Joey Garza and Mox Mox, the "manburner"--and you've got a story that keeps the reader busily turning pages.

This is a hardhitting, well-written account of the Old West in the last gasp of the 19th century. The book stands alone on its own merits.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: A fine piece of storytelling.
Review: Reading and hearing the criticism of this book, it seems obvious that the naysayers read Lonesome Dove with a romantic's eye. Don't.

As other well-written works repeatedly demonstrate -- contemporary novels, such as The Last Picture Show, and historical ones such as Buffalo Girls and Anything for Billy -- McMurtry is anything but rosy-eyed about his characters. Like George Bernard Shaw, McMurtry creates stories that are interesting and valuable, but also realistic.

People seem to disappointed with the content of Streets of Laredo, but the reality of the West is that it was a brutal, violent place. Viewed through the eyes of an aging denizen like Woodrow F. Call, it would naturally seem even more so, particularly viewed against the rather cold backdrop of encroaching modern civilization.

The actions and reactions of a Call, Lorena, even PeaEye Parker, all make perfect sense in this book. Would you expect the practical Woodrow to suddenly become a dashing hero with a sunset in the background? Of course not. Thus, an old Call finds himself bedeviled by a young, clever, ruthless killer. It wouldn't happen any other way. Would a mature Lorena do anything that wasn't practical, or at least deeply personal? Not in the least. So she's married to someone who is predictable, but also extremely reliable. And so on.

The new characters introduced in the Streets of Laredo are as well developed and interesting as we've come to expect from McMurtry. He even manages to make a Brooklyn accountant seem intriguing -- no mean feat, if you think about it.

And for all of the complaints about the graphic nature of some of the action in Laredo, no one can reasonably argue that McMurtry has lost his facility with words. As always with McMurtry, the prose flows lyrically; he remains one of the most underrated craftsmen of the novel.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: A Very Good Story, Just Don't Confuse it with Lonesome Dove.
Review: The first book of Larry McMurtry's I ever read was Lonesome Dove. That book enthralled me, making me wish he would re-visit the characters with a sequel. Eventually he did and "Streets of Laredo" is the result. The problem here is that you really can't read Streets as a sequel to Lonesome Dove, because if you do you will be extremely disappointed. The characters have changed so completely that they don't seem like the same people. If you can get over that hurdle then this becomes an exciting (if not rather violent) story based on the old west.

The book starts off on the premise that the cattle ranch in Montana failed, and Captain Woodrow Call has returned to Texas as a sort of bounty hunter. Other main characters from Lonesome Dove include Pea Eye, his loyal helper, and Lorena, the whore from Lonesome who is now a school teacher and wife of Pea Eye. (Does anyone else think this is just too much of a stretch for these characters?) Call has been hired by a railroad tycoon to stop a mexican bandit from constantly robbing his trains. Along the way we meet old friends from Lonesome, and famous historical persons (Judge Roy Bean, John Wesley Harding, etc). The action is extremely exciting, the suspense riviting, and McMurtry's style of writing keeps the reader on the edge of their seat. As with a lot of his writing McMurtry describes the violence in VERY strong detail. This seems to be done to help the reader climb into the story and experience the situations. Very well done but also very disturbing. As we draw near to the end the ending comes out of no where and surprises you. The eventual hero is not who you would expect.

Overall, this epic story is a blast to read. Again do not get caught up in the "sequel" thing, you MUST read this for it's own sake. I would recommend this for anyone who enjoys epic westerns, and for anyone who loves McMurtry's writings.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Good ending to a great series
Review: The fourth book in the series (Lonesome Dove was written first, but is actually third), Streets of Laredo is the most reflective and least adventurous story. There is still plenty of adventure, but the focus is on one character, the aging Call on a quest to find a killer. As usual, McMurtry writes a story that goes nowhere and everywhere at the same time. His stories are realistic and detailed, almost prosaic, but they are also universal and compelling. Some reviewers say that McMurtry is not a great writer. But by what standards are they judging, and what difference does it make? It's hard to beat McMurtry at sheer story-telling power.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Caution: Read this review before you read the others!!!
Review: There are several reviews regarding this book that follow, which actually gives the plot away, not only for Streets of Loredo-but for Lonesome Dove as well!! REVIEWERS TAKE NOTE: IT IS INAPPROPRIATE TO DISCUSS THE KEY PLOTS IN A REVIEW! PERIOD!
As far as Streets is concerned it is a good book-although not up to the Lonesome Dove, in my opinion. McMurtry is still a great writer, and this book proves not to be an exception.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Caution: Read this review before you read the others!!!
Review: There are several reviews regarding this book that follow, which actually gives the plot away, not only for Streets of Loredo-but for Lonesome Dove as well!! REVIEWERS TAKE NOTE: IT IS INAPPROPRIATE TO DISCUSS THE KEY PLOTS IN A REVIEW! PERIOD!
As far as Streets is concerned it is a good book-although not up to the Lonesome Dove, in my opinion. McMurtry is still a great writer, and this book proves not to be an exception.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Ok, but after Lonesome Dove, a bit of a let down
Review: This book was ok. I enjoyed the story. It was nice to find out what happened after Lonesome Dove. But this story doesn't nearly live up to the standard set in Lonesome Dove. I think Call without Gus just doesn't work quite as well.

I probably would have liked this better if I hadn't read it right after Lonesome Dove.


<< 1 2 >>

© 2004, ReviewFocus or its affiliates