Duane's Depressed by Larry McMurtry

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(Paperback - Reprint)

  • Pub. Date: April 2003
  • 432pp
  • Sales Rank: 57,410
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    • Overview
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    Product Details

    • Pub. Date: April 2003
    • Publisher: Simon & Schuster Adult Publishing Group
    • Format: Paperback, 432pp
    • Sales Rank: 57,410

    Synopsis

    In Duane's Depressed, Larry McMurtry returns to the West Texas oil town of Thalia for the final volume of the trilogy he began with The Last Picture Show and continued in Texasville. At 62, Duane Moore is too old for a midlife crisi s. But one brisk day in early February, Duane parks his pickup truck in the carport, hides the keys, and steps out for a long walk. In a community where there are more followers of Islam than committed pedestrians, a man who suddenly starts hoofing it draws no small amount of attention to himself, and soon the entire town is buzzing with the news of his strange behavior. His wife of 40 years, Karla, worries that he may have had a stroke and lost his mind, or, worse, decided that he wants a div orce. His family of casual substance abusers, petty thieves, and caterwauling grandchildren wonder how they will survive with their Pa-Pa holed up in a tiny cabin six miles away. And his lifelong friend, Sonny, seems to have lost the will to live. Only a Proustian prescription from a beautiful, yet unavailable psychoanalyst at last unlocks the source of his depression.

    New York Times Sunday Book Review - Robert Houston

    [McMurtry] proves again that he is as clear-eyed a writer as anyone in the business....Duane's Depressed is a worthy end to an important trilogy...that captures vividly and movingly nearly half a century of life in a great swath of America.

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    Biography

    Larry McMurtry worked as a cowhand on his father's Texas cattle ranch until he was 22, but never aspired to be a rancher. Instead, he published his first novel, Horseman, Pass By, when he was just 25. More than two dozen novels later, there's still more to McMurtry than a typical western.

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    Customer Reviews

    Easy reading--fast and absorbingby Anonymous

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    September 03, 2002: Duane's Depressed was the perfect mixture of serious drama from The Last Picture Show and the often slapstick comedy of Texasville. It was probably the best of the three books in the series because it doesn't bog you down into the depression alluded to in the title and doesn't get too outlandish in the comedy. Reading this book make me think much about my own committment to walking -- for exercise, that is, not a way of life. I recommend this book to practically anyone who likes to read. But be sure to read the whole series in sequence if you haven't already.

    Deeply moving and hilariousby Anonymous

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    August 21, 2002: My favorite McMurtry book!I loved Duane,Karla,and the whole cast of eccentrics in a way I hadn't with the first books.I loaned it to my friend,who then had her husband read it and her husband recommended it to his brother,and on and on.Noone disliked it.


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