From time to time, I get in the mood to read some non-fiction, but it’s usually non-fiction about fiction. Case in point, SELLING THE WILD WEST: POPULAR WESTERN FICTION 1860-1960 by Christine Bold, published in 1980 by Indiana University Press. A friend of mine recommended this book to me, and the author’s name was familiar. I remembered that she contributed some of the essays about various authors in TWENTIETH CENTURY WESTERN WRITERS. So it seemed like something I might enjoy.
The book has an intriguing concept: it’s an examination of the way Westerns
became a mass-produced genre with a lot of constraints and rules that developed
because of the way it was published, as well as how some authors of
Westerns were able to achieve distinct authorial voices despite those
constraints and rules. Bold starts with the dime novels and progresses through
the early Twentieth Century and the pulp and original paperback eras, doing
quick surveys of each of those publishing methods and then analyzing in more
detail the careers of several different authors from each time period.
I’m not a big fan of dime novels, but I enjoyed reading about their origins and
learned a few things. The authors Bold concentrates on in this section are Ned
Buntline, Prentiss Ingraham, Edward S. Ellis, and Edward L. Wheeler. I knew quite a bit about Buntline and Ingraham (I once edited a novel in which Buntline is the
main character, THE DIME NOVELIST by Clay More), but Ellis and Wheeler were
pretty much new to me. Bold also discusses the different approaches of the two
main publishers of dime novels, Beadle & Adams and Street & Smith.
In the section on the early Twentieth Century, Bold focuses on the big sellers—Owen
Wister, Zane Grey, Max Brand (Frederick Faust), and Emerson Hough—as well as
Frederic Remington, who (I didn’t know this) wrote several novels as well as
being a legendary artist of the American West. Brand, of course, is something
of a transitional figure, bridging the early days of Wister and Grey with the
pulp era that he dominated. I’ve read a lot about Wister (who originated much
of what we think of as Western fiction), Grey (the first bestseller in the
genre), and Brand (the first King of the Pulps), but I knew much less about
Remington and Hough. Neither of whom I’ve ever read, by the way.
Moving on, Bold covers the careers of several writers who “escaped” from the
pulps: Alan Le May, Ernest Haycox, Jack Schaefer, and Louis L’Amour. Le May I
know mostly from the movies based on his books, although I have read the novel
THE SEARCHERS (and didn’t like it as much as the movie). I’ve read and loved
both of Schaefer’s novels, SHANE and MONTE WALSH. I’ve come to appreciate
Haycox’s work, although I have a preference for his pulp era novellas before he
“escaped” those untrimmed pages. And while I haven’t read all of L’Amour’s novels
and stories, by any means, I’ve read a bunch of them. L'Amour comes in for the
greatest amount of criticism from Bold. She praises his marketing abilities but
doesn’t seem to think much of his writing.
The book wraps up with some brief coverage of “Anti-Western Westerns” from the
Seventies such as E.L. Doctorow’s WELCOME TO HARD TIMES and Ishmael Reed’s
YELLOW BACK RADIO BROKE DOWN. There’s also a mention of what Bold erroneously
refers to as “Playboy Westerns”, clearly a reference to the various Adult
Western series published under house names. Comparing them to dime novels is
fair game, I think. There are certainly similarities in the way they’re
produced. But I’ve never heard anybody else refer to them as Playboy Westerns,
a misnomer Bold picked up probably from the fact that Playboy Paperbacks
published two of the early Adult Western series, Slocum by Jake Logan and
Raider and Doc by J.D. Hardin, before those series were sold to Berkley.
SELLING THE WILD WEST is an enjoyable book with plenty of interesting insights.
There are stretches where the academic density of the writing made my eyes
start to glaze over a little, but for the most part it moves right along and is
quite entertaining if you’re interested in the subject. Which I am, considering
that a huge part of my own career has been spent writing books within a
specific system and following the rules (mostly unwritten) of that system,
while at the same time trying to establish my own voice and get across the
things that I want to get across. That’s been a lot of fun and I think I’ve
been somewhat successful at it.
1 comment:
This review was so good I ended up with tears in my eyes. You really hit the spot this time! With the hope that more westerns fans will find their to Christine’s excellent book.
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