Reviews & Essays

 

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New West Book Review

On the Road with Boulder’s Queen of Shoes and Sloth

Queen of the Road
By Doreen Orion
Broadway Books, 293 pages, $13.95

Don't be fooled by the author photo in the back of Boulder author Doreen Orion's new travel narrative, Queen of the Road. It depicts her wearing sneakers and exercise clothes, smiling next to her dog at a scenic overlook to which they've presumably hiked. Although she looks like a standard REI-shopping, backpacking, Yoga Journal-reading, outdoor-worshiping Boulderite, she reveals her true nature early on in Queen of the Road, which details the year she and her husband Tim spent cruising America in a tricked-out luxury bus.
[more]

 

New West Book Review

“Bronze Inside and Out” by Mary Strachan Scriver

Bronze Inside and Out: A Biographical Memoir of Bob Scriver
By Mary Strachan Scriver
368 pages, University of Calgary Press, $44.95

When Mary Strachan moved to Browning, Montana in August, 1961 to teach school, she didn’t imagine that one day she’d sleep with a cat, dog, gopher, badger, a few bobcats, a couple of foxes and an eccentric artist twice her age. But that’s exactly what happened when she met and married Bob Scriver who was residing and working as a bronze sculptor on the Montana Blackfeet Reservation.

“It was a mammal pile,” Mary Strachan Scriver said, happily describing the creature-lined bed where she and Bob Scriver cuddled up and slept the night away. “If Bob could have figured out how to get the eagle in the bed with us, I’m sure he would have done it.” [more]

 

Western Book Roundup

Policing Nonfiction, and Boulder Writer’s “Just Do It” takes Manhattan

Bryan Burrough recently reviewed Alexandra Fuller's The Legend of Colton H. Bryant for the New York Times Book Review. Burrough admired Fuller's poetic writing, but wasn't convinced that the book should be classified as nonfiction because so much of it consists of dialogue that she wasn't present for, and she admits in an author's note that she "juggled time" and took other "narrative liberties." Burrough writes:

"That’s not artistic license. It’s cheating. Not cheating in the sense that plagiarism is cheating. I don’t believe Fuller has committed a major literary felony here, but it’s clearly a misdemeanor, even if she comes out and admits it."

Also in the Roundup: A Denver Post reporter has sex with his wife 101 days in a row and recovers in time to write the tale. [more]

 

New West Book Review

“Here There Nowhere”: Michael Brophy’s Haunting Landscapes

Here There Nowhere: Paintings by Michael Brophy
Oregon State University Press
49 pages, $25

The first painting I saw by Oregon's Michael Brophy was "Night Truck." Although its subject matter might be considered ugly, it's a beautiful painting, with a silver semi front and center, charging through a dark night, illuminated by the headlights of the vehicle behind it like a stage performer awash in footlights. It's an evocative image that cast me, and surely many who look at it, back into memories of long night drives across the West. There's something about it that reminded me of an Edward Hopper painting: maybe the name, which recalls "Nighthawks," Brophy's skillful use of empty space and artificial light, or perhaps its feeling of brooding isolation that invites viewers to question exactly how they came to spend a sleepless night following this steel behemoth, the natural world surrounding the road erased in darkness so that they might be anywhere. [more]

 

New West Book Review

“In the Blast Zone” Examines Mount St. Helens’ Recovery

In the Blast Zone: Catastrophe and Renewal on Mount St. Helens
Ed. By Charles Goodrich, Kathleen Dean Moore & Frederick J. Swanson
Oregon State University Press, 124 pages, $15.95

In 2005 a group of writers and scientists from Oregon and Washington gathered to spend a weekend camping near Mount St. Helens on the 25th anniversary of the volcanic eruption that rained debris on the surrounding area, destroying flora and fauna for miles around, leaving behind what looked like "a gray, lifeless landscape." But as the essays by the participants in this pilgrimage that are collected in the new anthology In the Blast Zone detail, all was not destroyed: burrowing gophers survived under the soil, while other plants and animals took refuge in "rotten logs, snow banks, and ice-covered ponds." Logging companies quickly moved to replant trees, but the Mount St. Helens Volcanic National Monument was established, allowing scientists to observe the natural recovery process that would ensue without human intervention. [more]

 

New West Book Review

‘Mustang’: Defending Wild Horse’s Place in West, and in History

Mustang: The Saga of the Wild Horse in the American West
By Deanne Stillman
Houghton Mifflin
348 pages, $25

Some 55 million years ago, the ancestor to the modern-day horse, the “dawn horse,” appeared on what would become North America, writes Deanne Stillman. Four million years ago, Equus, the first creature we would recognize as a horse, appeared in what would be the American West. Long after vanishing from the region along with many fellow prehistoric mammals, the horse returned to the continent with the Spanish conquistadors and found its home again on the Western landscape. [more]

 

New West Book Excerpt

The Rise of a New Ranch in the American West

Courtney White's new book Revolution on the Range (Island Press, $25.95) seeks common ground between the goals of Western ranchers and environmentalists. White reports on individuals who are working to end the "tribal warfare between denizens of the 'Old' West and advocates of the 'New,' with lassos on one side, and lattes on the other." Publishers Weekly wrote, "In a time when environmental reporting has become justifiably gloomy, this book is a refreshing breath of pragmatic optimism." In the following prologue, White introduces the ideas that fuel his book.

In 1996, I had an anguished question on my mind: why didn’t environmentalists and ranchers get along better? In theory they shared many of the same hopes and fears—a love of wildlife, a deep respect for nature, an appreciation for a life lived outdoors, and a common concern for healthy water, food, fiber, and liberty. [more]

 

New West Book Review

Margot Kahn’s “Horses That Buck”

Horses That Buck: the Story of Champion Bronc Rider Bill Smith
By Margot Kahn
University of Oklahoma Press
194 pages, $24.95

I grew up going to the National Western Stock Show in Denver and Cheyenne's Frontier Days, but I never knew much about the rodeo cowboys that I saw—where they came from, what they did when they weren't riding broncos or bulls at these big showcases. Margot Kahn's Horses That Buck fills in the gaps for me through the life story of one cowboy, Bill Smith, who grew up in Bearcreek, Montana in 1941, moved to Cody, Wyoming as a teenager, and after many years of failure, broken bones, and living out of his car, rose to become a three-time World Champion Saddle Bronc rider. [more]

 

New West Children's Book Review

Buffalo Molly: Tracey E. Fern’s “Buffalo Music”

Buffalo Music
by Tracey E. Fern
Illustrated by Lauren Castillo
Clarion Books, 32 pages, $16

Last year when I was reading Michael Punke's excellent Last Stand, one detail about the how buffalo came to be rescued from the brink of extinction stood out: many of Yellowstone's buffalo came from a single herd preserved and nurtured by a woman named Mary Ann Goodnight, who settled in West Texas's Palo Duro Canyon in 1876. She and her husband Charles raised orphaned buffalo calves left behind after the mass slaughter, and their animals served as crucial breeding stock for the restoration of the Yellowstone herd. This seems to be the perfect tidbit to interest children in the history of the buffalo in the West, and Tracey E. Fern's debut picture book for ages 4 to 8, Buffalo Music, tells just this tale of one pioneer woman whose actions helped avert a species' extinction. [more]

 

New West Book Review

Brandon R. Schrand’s “The Enders Hotel”

The Enders Hotel
By Brandon R. Schrand
University of Nebraska Press
230 pages, $17.95

Brandon R. Schrand's vivid new memoir chronicles his childhood growing up in the Enders Hotel in Soda Springs, Idaho. In the 1970's, Schrand's grandparents restored the place, originally built in 1919, and welcomed all kinds of people, especially the itinerant laborers of the region. Schrand, who teaches creative writing at the University of Idaho, moved back and forth to the Enders as his mother's and stepfather's jobs came and went. "Because we were job seekers," he writes, "we endured the perpetual ebb and flow of work—the overtime followed, always, by the lay-offs, the shut-downs, the walkouts."

Brandon Schrand will appear at Common Knowledge Bookstore in Sandpoint, Idaho (May 16, 4:30 p.m.), Fact & Fiction in Missoula (June 13), and at The Enders Hotel in Soda Springs, Idaho (June 30, 5 p.m.).
[more]

 

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Books and Writers Editor

Jenny Shank

Pop culture obsessive, fiction writer, book devourer, dinosaur lover, DPS education survivor and partly-cloudy Boulderite.