Larry McMurtry's The last picture show : bookmarked / Steve Yarbrough ; Kirby Gann, series editor.
Record details
- ISBN: 9781632460493 (pbk.)
- ISBN: 1632460491 (pbk.)
- Physical Description: 153 pages ; 21 cm.
- Edition: First edition.
- Publisher: New York, NY : Ig Publishing, [2017]
- Copyright: ©2017.
Content descriptions
Summary, etc.: | "Set in a small, dusty Texas town, The Last Picture Show is one of Larry McMurtry's most memorable novels, and the basis for the enormously popular movie of the same name. In this volume in Ig's acclaimed Bookmarked series, award-winning author Steve Yarbrough shares with us the importance of this seminal novel on his life and work as he explores the parallels of coming of age as a writer in the American south, like Larry McMurtry"--Back cover. |
Search for related items by subject
Search for related items by series
Available copies
- 1 of 1 copy available at GRPL.

Publishers Weekly Review
Larry Mcmurtry's the Last Picture Show: Bookmarked
Publishers Weekly
(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
For this entry in the Bookmarked series, in which writers articulate how a particular book has influenced them, novelist Yarbrough (The Realm of Last Chances) discusses McMurtry's classic tale of small-town Texas life. Yarbrough details his own small-town Mississippi upbringing and skillfully conveys its complex matrix of race and class, the tug-of-war between religion and sexual desire, and the way in which his father's unrealized dreams colored much of his own life. Yarbrough, like Picture Show's protagonist Sonny Crawford, was a football star who lost his footing as soon as he graduated. Also like McMurtry's protagonist, he embarked on an affair with an older, married woman, an experience Yarbrough recounts unflinchingly. He does not ignore Peter Bogdanovich's successful film adaptation, but his focus remains on how McMurtry's novel, with its potent mix of sex, religion, and class, reflects his own upbringing. His vivid work leaves no doubt about the impact that reading can have on a person's life. As Yarbrough concludes, about first reading McMurtry, "[The Last Picture Show] would convince me that lives like mine, and those of the people I saw around me in a place I hated at least as much as I loved it, were worth an infinite number of stories." (Aug.) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.