Be Specific About Of Books The Cadence of Grass

Title:The Cadence of Grass
Author:Thomas McGuane
Book Format:Paperback
Book Edition:Special Edition
Pages:Pages: 256 pages
Published:May 13th 2003 by Vintage (first published 2002)
Categories:Fiction. Novels
Online Books The Cadence of Grass  Download Free
The Cadence of Grass Paperback | Pages: 256 pages
Rating: 3.55 | 401 Users | 41 Reviews

Narration During Books The Cadence of Grass

Sunny Jim Whitelaw, a descendent of pioneers and owner of a large bottling plant, may have died, but he has no intention of relinquishing control: his will specifies that no one gets a cent unless his daughter Evelyn reconciles with her estranged husband, Paul. But Evelyn is a strong-willed woman, fiercely attached to the land, whose horses transport her to a West she feels is disappearing, while Paul is a suave manipulator, without scruples, intent on living well.

As played out on the majestic stage of Montana cattle country, the ensuing drama involves blood, money, sex, vengeance, and a cross-dressing rancher. The Cadence of Grass is renewed evidence that McGuane is one of the finest writers we have, capable of simultaneously burnishing and demolishing the mythology of the West while doing rope tricks with the English language.

Details Books Toward The Cadence of Grass

Original Title: The Cadence of Grass
ISBN: 0679767452 (ISBN13: 9780679767459)
Edition Language: English

Rating Of Books The Cadence of Grass
Ratings: 3.55 From 401 Users | 41 Reviews

Weigh Up Of Books The Cadence of Grass
Good story. The ending was dark and rather odd. Crazy set of characters. However, the cross dressing cowboy was a bit of a stretch and didn't lend much to an otherwise exceptional story about a batshit crazy family. McGuane writes beautifully of horses and horsemanship.

The 4 stars is for the last 30 pages of the book; the words just about leap off the page, and the last 5 pages are electrifying, cathartic, inevitable, mystic, and horrible. I liked the language of the book a lot; the plot and most of the characters seemed secondary. Almost a horror novel in parts. I haven't read much else McGuane, but I will.

This was a good book about families and life. I didn't like it as much as some of my favorite non-genre writers, but that's just a matter of taste.

Quite possibly a yawner. I'm on p.22 and I'm not quite sure yet what to think of it. My plan this summer is to stop reading any book I'm not enjoying, so stay we'll see.Update: I returned it today. That felt good. I'm moving on :)

For anyone with a solid familiarity with Thomas McGuane's work, this is a fascinating novel.Here you have a novel with a female protagonist, written by a man who has often been written off as a male chauvinist pig, whose female characters have always been a major bone of contention with critics. You have a novelist who has continually been accused of rewriting autobiography, writing a novel that clearly has little to do with his own life. And you have the recognizable "McGuane protagonist" -- a

The title alone makes this book worth reading.

I read a short story of his awhile back, "Dogs", that I really liked and I've picked up a few of his longer pieces. This was mixed as well. Really fucking funny in some parts and a bit ragged in others, but overall it was decent. The guy has a mean sense of humor.