Comanche Moon
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
This article needs additional citations for verification. Please help improve this article by adding reliable references. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed. (December 2007) |
Comanche Moon | |
Author | Larry McMurtry |
---|---|
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Series | Lonesome Dove series |
Genre(s) | Western |
Publisher | Simon & Schuster |
Publication date | 1997 |
Media type | Print (Hardback & Paperback) |
Pages | 803 pp (paperback edition) |
ISBN | ISBN 0-671-02064-1 (paperback edition) |
Preceded by | Dead Man's Walk |
Followed by | Lonesome Dove |
Comanche Moon, a western novel by Larry McMurtry is the last one written in his Lonesome Dove series, though it is the second in the chronology of the narrative.
Contents |
[edit] Plot introduction
In this bridge novel between McMurtry's Dead Man's Walk and Lonesome Dove, Woodrow Call and Gus McCrae are in their middle years, still serving as respected Texas Rangers.
[edit] Plot summary
Texas Governor Elisha Pease sends a small troop of Texas Rangers, under the leadership of Captain Inish Scull, in pursuit of the celebrated Comanche horse thief, Kicking Wolf. This bold Indian steals Scull's famous horse and takes it to the Sierra Perdida to give it to the notorious Mexican bandit king Ahumado, feared for the horrible tortures that he inflicts upon his victims. Scull, promoting McCrae and Call to Captains and instructing them to lead the Ranger troop back to Austin, sets off on foot after Kicking Wolf, accompanied only by the Kickapoo tracker Famous Shoes. Ahumado ties Kicking Wolf up to be dragged away by a horse, and takes Kicking Wolf's companion, Three Birds, prisoner. Ahumado intends to impose a slow death on Three Birds, but Three Birds throws himself off a cliff. Scull finds the unconscious Kicking Wolf being dragged by the horse, and cuts the Comanche's bonds, which allows Kicking Wolf to survive and return to his tribe. Scull is soon captured by Ahumado, and placed in a cage, where he is supposed to die slowly.
Having returned to Austin, McCrae learns that his beloved Clara Forsythe intends to marry his rival, horse trader Bob Allen (though she is not married yet, as Scull's wife had led McCrae to believe). Call learns that his lover, the reluctant whore Maggie Tilton, is pregnant with his child. Prompted by Scull's wife Inez, the Governor sends Call and McCrae out in charge of another typically small Ranger troop, to rescue Captain Scull. While they are on this mission, Comanche chief Buffalo Hump leads his nation on the warpath. They burn much of Austin, killing Clara's parents and ravaging Long Bill's wife, Pearl. Maggie, having been prepared by Call, hides under a smokehouse, thus escaping the Comanches' notice.
The Rangers turn back to Austin as soon as they hear of the raid there. Pearl and Long Bill are unable to recover emotionally, and Long Bill hangs himself.
Scull handles the cage so well that Ahumado has him taken down, and has Goyeto cut off his eyelids. Ahumado sends word to Austin that he will return Scull for a ransom of one thousand cattle. Governor Pease sends the Rangers out once again, to collect the cattle and exchange the herd for Scull. The Rangers go to Lonesome Dove in search of cattleman Captain King. Realizing they will not be able to even obtain the cattle, Call and McCrae set out to try to rescue Scull on their own terms, leaving the rest of their troop behind. Meanwhile, Ahumado has been bitten by a poisonous spider, and goes South to die. Call and McCrae find Scull going insane in a pit, but the rescue is soon enough to allow Scull to mostly recover. Scull returns to Austin and later becomes a general with the Union army. Because of the eyepieces he has devised, he becomes known as "Blinders" Scull.
Buffalo Hump banishes his half-Mexican son Blue Duck. Blue Duck goes East and acquires wealth and notoriety as the leader of a gang of bandits.
At this point, the novel moves more quickly, giving highlights covering the period leading up to the sequel, Lonesome Dove. Maggie gives birth to Call's son Newt, but Call refuses to acknowledge the child is his. She goes to work at the general store, and Jake Spoon more or less moves in with her. The Civil War takes most of the soldiers away from the frontier, enabling the Comanches to push back the white settlers. After the Civil War, Call and McCrae are sent in pursuit of Blue Duck and his band of renegades. Buffalo Hump has gone off to die. Blue Duck hears of this and leaves his cutthroats to pursue his father. The rangers attack his band, but Blue Duck, having left, evades capture. He finds his father at his chosen place of death and kills him. Maggie dies while the Rangers are on this expedition.
[edit] Characters in "Comanche Moon"
- Woodrow Call – Texas Ranger
- Gus McCrae – Texas Ranger
- Clara Allen – Gus's former lover, a storekeeper's daughter
- Maggie Tilton – Woodrow's lover
- Inish Scull – Captain- Texas Ranger
- Inez Scull – Wife of Inish Scull
- Long Bill Coleman – Texas Ranger
- Jake Spoon, Pea Eye Parker, Josh Deets – Texas Ranger
- Famous Shoes – the Rangers' Kickapoo tracker
- Buffalo Hump – Comanche war-chief
- Jonathon Joss – Comanche horse thief
- Blue Duck – Son of Buffalo Hump
- Ahumado – Mexican bandit and murderer
- Goyeto – Ahumado's henchman and skinner (humans, not animals)
- Tana – A member of Buffalo Hump's tribe; likes torturing whites
[edit] Trivia
The Lonesome Dove series was not written in the chonological order of the saga. The saga runs as follows: Dead Man's Walk, Comanche Moon, Lonesome Dove, "Return to Lonesome Dove," and Streets of Laredo. The series was written in this order: Lonesome Dove, Streets of Laredo, Dead Man's Walk, Comanche Moon.
Wes Studi played the character of Famous Shoes in Streets of Laredo. He plays the character of Buffalo Hump in Comanche Moon.
In Comanche Moon, Ray McKinnon reprises his role of Long Bill Coleman in Dead Man's Walk.
[edit] Mini Series
The television adaptation of this novel aired on CBS beginning Sunday, January 13, and continuing Tuesday, January 15, and Wednesday, January 16 of 2008.
Cast:
- Val Kilmer as Inish Scull
- Steve Zahn as Augustus McCrae
- Karl Urban as Woodrow F. Call
- Linda Cardellini as Clara Forsythe
- Elizabeth Banks as Maggie
- Ryan Merriman as Jake Spoon
- Ray McKinnon as Bill Coleman
- Keith Robinson as Joshua Deets
- Wes Studi as Buffalo Hump
- Adam Beach as Blue Duck
- James Rebhorn as Gov. Elisha Pease
- Jake Busey as Tudwal
- Melanie Lynskey as Pearl Coleman
- Sal Lopez as Ahumado
- Norbert Leo Butz as Capt. Richard King
- Indira Varma as Therese Wanz
- Kristine Sutherland as Elmira Forsythe
- Rachel Griffiths as Inez Scull
- Toby Metcalf as Ranger Lee Hitch
- Troy Baker as Pea Eye Parker
- Jeremy Ratchford as Charles Goodnight