Review and interview
This is a fine novel. If you drew a line between Lonesome
Dove and All the Pretty Horses, you would find Scalp Mountain somewhere along the way. Robb immerses you in a West
that is saturated in violence and the sorrows that violence brings with it.
It is the 1870s in the border country along the Rio Grande
and points west. The killing fields of the Civil War are a fresh memory, and
the atrocities of the Indian Wars continue to haunt the days and nights of both
whites and Apaches.
Plot. In the midst
of all this, a young man, Colum McNeal, is pursued by killers. A fugitive, he
has blood on his hands, having done the unspeakable, killing his own brother.
He believes his pursuers are gunmen hired by his enraged father. One of them,
Lohman, is a man he’s known for many years, who has mysterious reasons of his
own for stalking him.
He has also been picked out for revenge by an Apache, Jose
Otero, whose family has been killed by whites and his infant son taken. A
fierce warrior, he thinks of himself as already dead. He is driven only by his
last desire to break the hearts of those who have broken his own and his people’s
spirits.
Ocotillo, Big Bend National Park, Texas |
A well-meaning ranger, Captain Henry, complicates matters by
saving the life of Otero’s infant son and giving him to the care of a childless
couple, Michael and Clementine. When Otero abducts Clementine and his son,
there follows a long chase into the Big Bend country, an arid and unpopulated
desert region along the Mexican border.
Among this party of soldiers and civilians, lives are lost
in firefights with Otero’s men. When Clementine is found, most of the
surviviors turn back, leaving Colum and a handful of others to follow Otero.
Among them are the generous and fatherly Captain Henry and the mysterious
Lohman.
There are still many treacherous miles to cover and several
turns of plot before the story reaches its end, steeped in more bloodshed and
sorrows. Robb leaves a reader with this feeling you get sometimes from both
McMurtry and McCarthy, that the West was won at a terrible cost, whether men or
women, Indian or white, living or dead.
Heroism. The novel
is compelling for the way it takes the elements of the traditional western and
casts them in an unaccustomed light. Elmer Kelton would do something similar in
his Texas Ranger trilogy, Lone Star Rising, but his focus is on
the heroism found on both sides of the Indian Wars.
Rio Grande, Big Bend National Park, Texas |
Robb looks past that, not to deny it, but to shake us to the
core with the uncertainties and anxieties of living in those times. Also, to
strip away some of the myth that obscures history. She humanizes the heroism,
and doing so bonds us to her characters as people with hopes, fears, and mixed
motives little different from our own.
Some might call her central character, Colum, an anti-hero.
He harks back to Cain, the brother-murdering son of Adam and Eve. Alone in the
world, he is haunted by guilt, regrets, and painful memories. A sexual urgency
in him draws him powerfully to the wife of his friend Michael. We admire him
finally for the courage to face whatever threatens to kill him, including his
unforgiving father.
Wrapping up. As I
began by saying, this is a fine novel. I rarely say about a novel that it was
hard to put down. That’s no reflection on good writing; I’m just easily
distracted. But there were times when this one had me and refused to let go.
For anyone who likes their westerns well grounded in history, this is one you
don’t want to miss.
Julia Robb describes herself as a former journalist and
magazine writer, who grew up in small-town Texas. She now lives in Marshall,
Texas, where she works as a free-lance editor. You can read about her life
growing up at her blog. Scalp Mountain is currently available as an ebook for the kindle.
Julia Robb |
Interview
Julia Robb has generously agreed to talk here today about writing and the writing of Scalp Mountain, so I'm turning the rest of this page over to her.
Fellow Texas writer Larry McMurtry has said, “Backward is just not a natural direction for Americans to
look—historical ignorance remains a national characteristic.” Would you
share that opinion?
Absolutely. Americans do not know or understand their
history, and they have been brainwashed to believe in good guys and bad guys:
Somebody has to be right. Liberal thinkers enjoy exposing notables as imperfect
and more traditional thinkers believe in the myth of the heroic.
The truth is in between. From the beginning of the world,
humans have been imperfect and complicated, thus our history has been imperfect
and complicated. Thomas Jefferson was an impressive person and one who, with
many others, risked everything to fight the English, but he was also human and
probably had a slave mistress. Was he a bad man or a good man? Do we judge him
by 21st Century standards, or by the standards of his time?
Much of this ignorance stems from America’s eagerness for
the future, which produces a reluctance to look back even one day. It’s easier
to put things in categories and go on. Mass media also trains people to want
pablum. On the other hand, Americans (and probably most of the world) have
always preferred the cheap seats.
Big Bend National Park, Texas |
How do you define the term “traditional western,” and is Scalp
Mountain an example of one?
I tried to write Scalp Mountain as a historical novel,
meaning a book which helps explain events during a specific time period, and
one which embodies themes. Many novels which appear to be Westerns are not; for
instance, Tom Lea’s very fine The Wonderful Country.
I urge anyone interested in the frontier, Texas, Mexico
and/or art, to read this book (Lea was a visual artist as well as a writer and
he illustrated Wonderful Country). Lea
never got the recognition he deserved for The Wonderful Country.
I guess I don’t know what a traditional Western is. I just
take books for what they are.
To what extent did growing up and living in Texas help or
hinder the writing of this novel?
I couldn’t have written Scalp Mountain without growing up in Texas, with the distances, the
sky spreading to the end of the world. It shaped my spirit, although I’m not
sure what shape it took. And Texans are not like other Americans and that has
to do with their history; particularly the long, barbaric Comanche wars. It
shaped the culture. (Read Empire of the Summer Moon, by S.C. Gwynne, to understand this).
I was exiled in Maryland for fifteen years, working, and I
can tell you Maryland is wonderful, but its people were shaped by a whole
different ethos.
In reading western fiction, can you tell those who write
of Texas from a lifetime of first-hand experience and those who don’t?
I’m not sure, I haven’t read that many historical novels or
westerns about Texas. There’s really not a whole lot of them. I can sure tell
the late Tom Lea grew up in Texas. His tone, meaning the feel of the place, is
perfect.
I’ve found women and men write different kinds of books
about Texas, and/or the American West. Women writers tend to be sloppily
sentimental about Indians and their culture (by the way, I’ve asked many Indians
what they want to be called, Native American, etc. and they always told me they
are comfortable with “Indian”).
Men tend to be more rigorous, although not always. One Texas
writer wrote a novel from the Comanches’ point of view and he didn’t even mention
Comanche raped their women captives to death, or kept them in sexual slavery.
This kind of stuff is important because it’s truth.
Santa Elena Canyon, Rio Grande, Big Bend National Park |
Did any of the characters surprise you as they took shape
in the writing?
Henry surprised me. He turned out to be such a character; a
man willing to do what he had to do, but loving in his attitudes, poetic
(although a terrible poet) and whimsical. I missed him so much after, well, you
know...
How closely does the finished story compare to the way
you originally conceived it?
It’s pretty much the way I thought it out. The characters
grew a little. And the research produced complete surprises. It was a
revelation to find that everybody on the frontier scalped everybody else; white
men scalped other white men, whites scalped Indians, Indians scalped Indians,
Indians scalped whites. In one instance, some Indian even scalped a white man’s
dog. That’s true.
Talk about how you decided on the novel’s title.
This story is about the Indian Wars. I wanted to tell a
balanced story and that meant demonstrating that both sides were right, both
were wrong and everybody got hurt. The wholesale scalping was the perfect
symbol for this. Do you remember the scene where Henry and Colum were riding
past “Scalp Mountain,” and Colum told Henry why it was given that name?
Pima caught two Apache and crucified them on the mountain.
They used real crosses and tied the Apache to the crosses with green rawhide,
then left them to die in the sun. That really happened. I went a step further,
to illustrate the book’s theme, by having the Pima decorate the crosses with
scalps; white, Indian, Mexican.
To what extent was writing this novel influenced by
western movies and TV?
I think all American writers have been influenced by film.
We’ve had movies now more than one hundred years and it has trained everyone to
see cinemagraphically. I know that’s the way I see, when I’m writing.
Big Bend National Park, Texas |
Talk a bit about the creative decisions that went into
the cover of the novel.
I looked online for Texas landscape painters and found the
wonderful David Forks. When I looked through his online gallery, I found the
book cover. It seemed like a perfect illustration for the book, a somber
mountain in West Texas.
I’m grateful to David for letting me use his painting and
for designing the book cover for me. I urge everyone to go to his online
gallery and look at his work. His website is at fineartstudioonline.com, or
write him at davidforks.com.
Do women writers bring something to the writing of
western fiction that male writers generally don’t?
No.
How would you hope to influence other western writers?
I don’t know how to answer that. We just all do what we do.
I guess I do hope writers would delve deeper into events and produce books
which are more complex and nuanced about cultures and people. Some idiot,
writing on Facebook, recently declared that Custer was a psychopath. Total
ignorance. Custer was not a psychopath.
What can readers expect from you next?
I’m not sure. I’ve written sixty pages of a novel I’m not
happy with and it’s in a drawer. I have another finished novel, about Texas in
the 1960s, about the power struggle between Anglos and Hispanics, but nobody
will publish it. Agents say it’s not a genre novel, it isn’t mystery, it isn’t thriller,
it isn’t fantasy, it isn’t a Western, etc., so we can’t sell it. I’m almost
finished with a movie script based on Scalp Mountain. No telling what will happen to it.
Anything you’d like to talk about that we didn’t cover?
Yes, I believe life is tragic, but tragedy can produce
redemption. Art, at its best, produces transcendence. And that’s what I’ve
tried to do with this book.
Thanks, Julia. Every success.
Photo credits: Wikimedia Commons
Coming up: Mary Etta Stickney, Brown of Lost River (1900)
Great interview. This book sounds really interesting. I liked both Lonesome dove and all the pretty horses, but something sort of inbetween sounds even better
ReplyDeleteGreat interview and review, as usual. Also I particularly like the photos of Big Bend NP. We were there years ago, it's probably time to check it out again...
ReplyDeleteThank you Ron. Let me know what you think of my idea, regarding your writing. Best wishes, Julia
ReplyDeleteThis author presents herself so well. You can hardly pass it up.
ReplyDelete