Larry McMurtry
About the Author
Books by Larry McMurtry (1)
Lonesome Dove
14 discussion topics
“Lonesome Dove” (1985) by Larry McMurtry is widely considered the definitive Western novel—the “War and Peace” of the American frontier. While it features gunfights and outlaws, it is primarily a deeply human epic about aging, friendship, and the bittersweet end of an era.
The Plot: One Last Great Adventure
The story centers on two aging former Texas Rangers, Captain Augustus “Gus” McCrae and Captain Woodrow F. Call. After years of keeping the peace on the border, they find themselves running a dusty cattle outfit in the tiny, dead-end town of Lonesome Dove.
Bored and restless, Call decides they should drive a massive herd of stolen cattle 2,500 miles north to Montana, the last “unspoiled” territory. What follows is a grueling journey across a beautiful but indifferent landscape, filled with horse thieves, sandstorms, water moccasins, and a terrifying villain named Blue Duck.
The Dynamic Duo: Gus vs. Call
The heart of the novel is the interplay between the two leads, who represent two different ways of being a man in the West:
Augustus McCrae: The philosopher of the trail. He is talkative, loves whiskey and biscuits, and believes that life is meant to be enjoyed. He is the emotional heart of the group, constantly prodding Call to “be human.”
Woodrow Call: The silent, stoic worker. He is obsessed with duty and the cattle drive. He expresses his feelings through work rather than words, and he struggles to acknowledge his own vulnerabilities—or his own son.
Key Themes: The De-Mythologizing of the West
McMurtry wrote the book to strip away the “Hollywood glamour” of the Old West.
The Brutality of Nature: Death in Lonesome Dove is often sudden, random, and unheroic. Characters die from snake bites or lightning as often as they do in shootouts.
Regret and Lost Love: The characters are haunted by the “ones who got away,” particularly Clara Allen, the woman Gus loved but could never settle down with.
The Passing of the Frontier: By the time they reach Montana, the characters realize that the wild world they were so good at “taming” is disappearing, leaving men like them behind.
Why It’s a 2026 Masterpiece
The “Vibe” Shift: In 2025 and 2026, there has been a massive resurgence in “Modern Western” aesthetics (thanks to shows like Yellowstone). Lonesome Dove remains the gold standard that all modern Westerns are measured against.
The 1989 Miniseries: Starring Robert Duvall and Tommy Lee Jones, it is one of the few adaptations that fans agree is just as good as the book. Duvall famously called Gus McCrae his favorite role of all time.