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Moving On
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Barnes and Noble
Moving On
Current price: $18.95
Barnes and Noble
Moving On
Current price: $18.95
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Size: Paperback
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Moving On
anticipates McMurtry’s
Terms of Endearment
and explores the emotional journey of a young woman against a sprawling metropolis in 1970s Texas.
Larry McMurtry’s
, his epic first novel in the acclaimed Houston series, has long been considered a defining tale of “monumental honesty” worthy of great attention (
New York Times
). Preceding
by five years, it is essential reading for anyone who appreciates the inherent genius of McMurtry’s late twentieth-century fiction.
centers on the life of Patsy Carpenter, one of his most beloved characters. After calmly finishing a Hershey bar alone in her car, a restless Patsy drives away from her lifeless marriage in search of a greater purpose. In “precise and lyrical prose” (
Boston Globe
), McMurtry reveals the complex, colorful lives of Pete, the rodeo clown; high-spirited cowboy Sonny Shanks; and impassioned grad student Hank. A critical work of American literature that “presents human drama with sympathy and compassion” (
Los Angeles Times
),
unfolds a tale of perseverance and emotional survival in the modern-day West.
anticipates McMurtry’s
Terms of Endearment
and explores the emotional journey of a young woman against a sprawling metropolis in 1970s Texas.
Larry McMurtry’s
, his epic first novel in the acclaimed Houston series, has long been considered a defining tale of “monumental honesty” worthy of great attention (
New York Times
). Preceding
by five years, it is essential reading for anyone who appreciates the inherent genius of McMurtry’s late twentieth-century fiction.
centers on the life of Patsy Carpenter, one of his most beloved characters. After calmly finishing a Hershey bar alone in her car, a restless Patsy drives away from her lifeless marriage in search of a greater purpose. In “precise and lyrical prose” (
Boston Globe
), McMurtry reveals the complex, colorful lives of Pete, the rodeo clown; high-spirited cowboy Sonny Shanks; and impassioned grad student Hank. A critical work of American literature that “presents human drama with sympathy and compassion” (
Los Angeles Times
),
unfolds a tale of perseverance and emotional survival in the modern-day West.