Guthrie embraces Big Sky Country!

view
Creative Commons License photo credit: qmnonic

 This week we are exploring the glorious state of MontanaA. B. Guthrie wasn’t actually born in Montana, but moved there at the age of 6 months and was named the 4th Most Influential Montanan of the past century.  I have yet to read his writing, but since Montana is one of my very favorite states, I look forward to it.  A big “thank you” to my friend Eve for introducing me to this week’s literary countryman.

GLACIER NATIONAL PARK pugh family photos
Creative Commons License photo credit: DON PUGH PERTH WESTERN AUSTRALIA

First, an overview of his popular The Big Sky

What “The Big Sky” is: An unflinching account not only of the hardships and dangers of the 1830-1845 mountain man era, but also a glimpse into the meaning of our own existence here – the reasons why we come, the reasons why we stay. True to Guthrie’s bid for honesty, the answers aren’t always pretty.

Guthrie’s Boone Caudill is the quintessential anti-hero, a mean, moody misanthrope who heads West to escape his troubled past as well as to seek adventure and freedom. Ultimately, though, trouble follows Boone – because, after all, the one thing he can’t run away from is himself.

The theme, Guthrie wrote, is “that each man kills the thing he loves.

reflection in avalanche lake
Creative Commons License photo credit: SurprisePally

“If it had any originality at all, it was only that a band of men, the fur-hunters, killed the life they loved and killed it with a thoughtless prodigality perhaps unmatched.”

Hardly the stuff of romanticism. Not only did Guthrie tell an accurate tale – although, as Bill Bevis points out in his book, “Ten Tough Trips,” most mountain men headed west for the money, not for the isolation – but he wrote in the vernacular of the time and place, in language that, as Bevis said, can be eloquent.

“So the language itself, used seriously and beautifully, assures Guthrie’s neighbors and successors that the West can generate art,” Bevis wrote. “We need not imitate British speech or French manners. We can speak in our own voice.”

Thusly did Guthrie point the way for generations of Western writers to do what literature is supposed to do: Tell the truth, and tell it with beauty and grace.

avalanche lake
Creative Commons License photo credit: SurprisePally

He followed The Big Sky with The Way West, which won the Pulitzer.  Here’s an excerpt:

Evans had heard about the Platte. He had pictured it in his mind. He thought he knew what he was going to see, but now that his horse stood on the summit, he couldn’t believe. He couldn’t believe that flat could be so flat or that distance ran so far or that the sky lifted so dizzy-deep or that the world stood so empty. He saw old Rock chase a badger into a hole, saw a bunch of antelope drifting, saw the river sluiced and the woods rising on its islands and the sand in a great gray waste, but it was something he couldn’t put a name to that held him. He thought he had never seen the world before. He never had known distance until now. He had lived shut off by trees and hills and had thought the world was a doll’s world and distance just three hollers away and the sky no higher than a rifle shot.

more waterfalls at avalanche
Creative Commons License photo credit: SurprisePally

Curious about what states we’ve done so far and which ones are on deck?

us map by marxchivist Guthrie embraces Big Sky Country!
Photo by marxchivist

First, from Melanie Jones:

  • Alabama: To Kill A Mockingbird by Harper Lee (check out my To Kill A Mockingbird Sample Kit!)
  • Michigan: The Virgin Suicides by Jeffery Eugenides
  • Alaska: The Man Who Swam With Beavers by Nancy Lord
  • Arizona: The Bean Trees by Barbara Kingsolver
  • North Dakota: Peace Like a River by Leif Enger
  • Vermont: The Secret History by Donna Tartt
  • Hawaii: Heads by Harry by Lois-ann Yamanaka
  • Georgia: Leaving Atlanta by Tayari Jones
  • And I went out on my own for…

  • Florida: Their Eyes Were Watching God by Nora Zeale Hurston
  • Minnesota: In the Lake of the Woods by Tim O’Brien
  • Wisconsin: When Madeline Was Young by Jane Hamilton
  • Louisiana: Divine Secrets of the Ya-Ya Sisterhood by Rebecca Wells (Jones’ pick) and The Awakening by Kate Chopin (my pick)
  • Colorado: Plainsong by Kent Haruf
  • Maryland: Anything by Anne Tyler
  • Georgia: Awakening by Kate Chopin
  • Ohio: The Bluest Eye by Toni Morrison
  • Arkansas: I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings by Maya Angelou
  • Virginia: John Grisham
  • Idaho: Housekeeping by Marilynne Robinson
  • North Carolina: Ellen Foster by Kaye Gibbons
  • Tennesee: Run by Ann Patchett
  • New Jersey: Anything by Janet Ivanovich
  • Texas: Anything by Elmer Kelton
  • Connecticut: The Shipping News by E. Annie Proulx
  • Wondering where your state is? Coming soon… In the meantime, weigh in on future picks!

    Welcome back!

    Enter your email address:

    Delivered by FeedBurner

    1 Comment(s)

    1. A reader passed along another Montana writer…

      Ivan Doig! She recommended Dancing at the Rascal Fair in particular…

      Kristen | Jan 31, 2010 | Reply

    7 Trackback(s)

    1. Aug 15, 2008: from 50 States 50 Books: Pennsylvania | BOOK CLUB CLASSICS!
    2. Sep 5, 2008: from 50 States 50 Books: | BOOK CLUB CLASSICS!
    3. Sep 19, 2008: from 50 States 50 Books: California | BOOK CLUB CLASSICS!
    4. Nov 21, 2008: from 50 States 50 Books: Illinois | BOOK CLUB CLASSICS!
    5. Nov 28, 2008: from Washington's Wisdom | BOOK CLUB CLASSICS!
    6. Dec 5, 2008: from Nevada's Silver Pen | BOOK CLUB CLASSICS!
    7. Dec 26, 2008: from jayhawking writers | BOOK CLUB CLASSICS!

    Post a Comment