As plain and affecting as a Woody Guthrie ballad, this re-creation of the crooked
career of the Depression-era desperado/folk hero is Pulitzer Prize-winner McMurtry's
(Lonesome Dove) first collaborative effort; he and screenwriter Ossana originally
wrote this story as a filmscript. In 1925, after foolishly paying with (ill-gotten)
cash for a brand-new Studebaker and driving home to visit his teenage wife and infant
son, 21-year-old Oklahoma farm boy Charles Arthur Floyd is arrested and imprisoned
for armed robbery. Released after four years, Floyd loses his new job because he's
an ex-con. Arrested twice for vagrancy, he returns to the outlaw life and meets
rodeo rider-turned-bandit George Birdwell when both he and Floyd strut in to rob
the same bank at the same time. The outlaws embark on a reckless spree marked by
small-town heists and artless women until Floyd-captured and convicted but escaped-
kills a deputy and Birdwell is shot dead by a bookkeeper during a bank robbery.
Heading north, Floyd eventually becomes the quarry of legendary G-man Melvin Purvis.
Told in homely prose that's perfectly wedded to its subject, this engaging tragicomic
novel is as much a study of quiet desperation as of crime and punishment.
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