More and more, I think of genre writing as
a game of cards. A writer gets dealt a few from the deck to make of them what he or she can, given some ingenuity, luck, the rules of the game, and the help of a wild card or two.
This is especially true of the
western, which has long relied on a familiar formula, with its roots in the
dime novel. A writer departs from that formula at some risk of losing an
audience. You admire someone who manages to get away with it, and Elmer Kelton
has been one of them.
Plot. Other Men’s Horses has several elements
of a typical western plot: a Texas Ranger, horse thieves, a cavalry officer, a
sheriff, a lynch mob, and a long pursuit over sparsely settled frontier. At the
center of the story is Texas Ranger Andy Pickard, out to bring in a man for
trial who has killed another man over the theft of a horse.
Pickard's life is unexpectedly saved by
Bannister, the wanted man, who sees that he gets to a doctor when Pickard is himself shot.
Given his duty to arrest Bannister, Pickard follows the man’s wife, Geneva, as
she drives a buggy for many days across a stretch of 1880s Texas to
meet up with her husband. Along the way, Pickard’s route crosses that of a Buffalo
soldier, Joshua Hamlin, who is a deserter and on the run after avenging the death of
one of his own men by whites.
Texas, 1880s |
There are a number of strong characters, including Mrs. Bannister, who demonstrates considerable grit as she
travels alone from one frontier settlement to the next, managing in one case to outwit and rob
an unsavory gambler with unwelcome designs on her, while finding other men—a
pair of bachelor brothers—who treat her with kind and gentlemanly
respect.
The band of horse thieves, once Pickard
finally catches up with them, are well drawn, as Kelton includes in their number another woman, Emmy, who is tough as nails and thoroughly independent, cooking
for the men in exchange for shelter and protection. A truly nasty villain,
Tadlock, shows up as well, joining a brace of unpleasant types in the novel,
introduced early on in the form of the Slocums, who are also after Bannister.
Texas Rangers, 1894 |
Storytelling style. So the novel is well
populated by the good, bad, and ugly. Most interesting are the Bannisters, who are
neither good nor bad, just resourceful in a world where a horse thief might
keep a wife and remain strictly faithful to her, though he may leave her for
long periods.
As Kelton structures the novel, it passes
back and forth between the point of view of the pursued, Geneva, and her
pursuer, Pickard. We traverse the same terrain twice as he follows her,
sometimes losing her trail and finding it again, then having converged at the
thieves’ camp, returning for a final confrontation with the Slocums.
Wrapping up. Elmer Kelton (1926–2009)
was a prolific writer and winner of numerous awards. His novels The Day the Cowboys Quit (1971) and The Time It Never Rained (1973) are
often mentioned on lists of top western fiction. Other Men’s Horses was his last novel. For many readers, including
myself, what is distinctive about his fiction is his portrayal of character and the faith he keeps with history,
which he typically gives as much attention to as plot.
Elmer Kelton |
In Andy Pickard, Kelton doesn’t give
us the usual western hero, fearless and good with a gun. We get instead a young
man who takes a risky job for the sole purpose of providing for himself and his
young wife. For all his dedication to duty, the Rangers pay little, and he is away from home for
weeks at a time, always vulnerable and capable of being killed or wounded while
in pursuit of outlaws. He steps from the pages of western history, not myth.
The experience of
reading Kelton is far different from the traditional western to be found in a
writer like Louis L’Amour, where vulnerability often spills over into violence (see BITS review of L’Amour’s The Quick and the Dead), and catharsis comes as the hero kills the villains.
In
Kelton’s novel, a villain is undone by a woman wielding a shovelful of burning
coals. The shift away from convention is dramatic, but it has a ring of authenticity that makes
the difference. The novel is also candid in its depiction of race and race relations on the frontier.
Other Men’s Horses is currently
available in print and ebook formats at amazon, Barnes&Noble, and AbeBooks. For Friday's Forgotten Books, click on over to Patti Abbott's blog.
Further reading/viewing:
Image credits:
Wikimedia Commons
Author's photo by Larry D. Moore, CC BY-SA 3.0
Coming up: Glossary of frontier fiction
My favorite western writer, love the way he puts together and tells a story. His switching of point of view between the good guy and the bad guy is not something that every writer can get away with but it seems effortless for him. I have read most, maybe all, of Kelton's stuff, never found one of his novels lacking.
ReplyDeleteAgreed on all points.
DeleteI haven't read this but I recognize the title. I will read it at some point or another. Great title for sure.
ReplyDeleteHe actually works the title in to the flow of the narrative at one point. There is seldom a real connection between western novels and the title on the cover.
DeleteElmer Kelton knew how to put things together to make an exciting story that is always interesting to the very end..
ReplyDeleteI'm not too sure that any kind of fiction escapes the suit it's dealt or draped in, but most of the best writers bend the cards any which way they choose, and do some interesting shuffles...losing the audience by giving them something interesting doesn't happen Too often, in my experience as a reader, at least...I think Kelton earned a lot more devotion than even the bigger brand names in western writing who were his contemporaries, in part for what he brought (and what he wouldn't add) to his game...
ReplyDeleteRon, while I have not read Elmer Kelton's westerns, it was interesting to read your perspective on what sets his work apart from other writers of frontier fiction. Thanks for the review.
ReplyDelete