Damn near every time a new, good looking western comes out someone
writes a piece about whether the western is making a comeback. It's not
the old days of tons of movie westerns and won't ever be again (do we
really want it to be?). A list of the top ten westerns from the last
decade is easy to compile because there were only 10 westerns made, you
just have to decide how to order them (sarcasm). Jokey bullshitting
aside this Christmas looks to be a one good for western fans with two
high profile western films coming out. Take a look at the trailers and
let me know what you think.
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Saturday, August 15, 2015
Thursday, August 6, 2015
If Laird Barron wrote a western
"Have you ever thought about writing a Western novel, with no horror or science fiction elements? I’ve considered writing in many genres. My grandfather was a failed novelist. Westerns were his favorite. If I do it, and I just might, it would be a sprawling epic in the spirit of Leone and Peckinpah, full of bloody revenge, heaving bosoms, and men who love gold and horses and guns and come to bad ends. And there’d be something fucking weird going on in the periphery. Sorry."
"When I run up against that 'How can you, a mere woman, write Westerns?'
attitude, I mention that in my youth I owned a number of horses, did
some trail riding in Colorado and Wyoming, and once worked as a shill to
a horse trader in Kansas. I don't go into details about the trail
riding being connected with a stay at a dude ranch, or the job with the
horse trader only lasting a couple of weeks (he got arrested)." -- Lee
Hoffman
Tuesday, August 4, 2015
Some interesting items learned from reading non-fiction western material recently.
-Ernest Haycox rented a writing office in downtown Portland so that he would go to work everyday as if writing were a regular job.
-The slicks had an editorial policy to not portray Native Americans "sensitively or compassionately".
-When Jack Schaefer submitted Shane to Argosy Magazine it was his first fiction that he had written. He was such a novice that he sent them the original and didn't keep a copy for himself.
-Ernest Haycox rented a writing office in downtown Portland so that he would go to work everyday as if writing were a regular job.
-The slicks had an editorial policy to not portray Native Americans "sensitively or compassionately".
-When Jack Schaefer submitted Shane to Argosy Magazine it was his first fiction that he had written. He was such a novice that he sent them the original and didn't keep a copy for himself.
Monday, August 3, 2015
westerns as crime fiction in a historical setting
I'm familiar with the idea that westerns are just "crime fiction in a
historical setting" (a comment left on my DSD post and one I've heard
before). It's true, but only partially and to an extent. A lot of the
westerns in the 50s and 60s for example were hardboiled westerns that
fits the above idea but there is much more to the genre, and other modes
and story types are available. My current opinion is that picaresque
westerns serve the genre best for example.