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Buffalo Girls 
Thoroughly enjoyed this audio book on a long drive through the back country in Oregon.
I just finished this book for the second time. Its a wonderful story built on very few facts, alas. Yes, many characters were real, but I looked up Calamity herself, and her real life was quite different...she did marry, she did have children. I was disappointed. I enjoy the writing, I enjoy the story, and of course McMurtry would spin new tales upon the history, but I had trusted his research to be more present. I still recommend the book for pleasurable reading, and whos to say the authors

A fictional story of Calamity Jane. Several characters are real (Annie Oakley, Buffalo Bill Cody, Sitting Bull) others are based on real people, all are fictionalized. It's the story of people who live beyond their time - in this case the Wild West after it was tamed. It's a beautiful sad story I've read many times. Betty Buckley reads the audio version and she is just heartbreakingly wonderful.
Very, very disappointing as I have other McMurtry novels on my shelves (Lonesome Dove, Leaving Cheyenne, The Last Picture Show, Texasville) and have thoroughly enjoyed each and every one of them. I looked forward to Buffalo Girls as another enjoyable read. Boy, was I let down. The entire story revolves around Calamity Jane and her ability (or inability) to adapt to changes that the Wild West is going through during the mid 19th century. The indians are gone from the plains, there are no more
Calamity Jane. Dora DuFran. Wild Bill Hickok. Buffalo Bill Cody. Mountain men, Indians, miners, cowboys, and a big overgrown sweetheart of a young man named Ogden. (And Fred the parrot.)Some were actual people, with their stories tweaked a bit to fit into McMurtry's plot lines. Others were invented. (Fred the parrot was real.)The glory days of the Old West are over. The buffalo are gone, so are the beaver. The life itself is gone. Civilization has arrived. What are living legends supposed to do
An old compliment to actors that you rarely hear anymore is, "I'd listen to him read the phone book," and I thought of that as I was reading Buffalo Girls. When it comes to Larry McMurtry, I'd read it if he wrote the phone book because, as plotless as it might be, he would somehow manage to convey in it all the pain of daily living. Not that Buffalo Girls has no plot, but it's a thin one; it's mostly just a few old characters coming to grips with the fact that the time of the American West as an
Larry McMurtry
Paperback | Pages: 352 pages Rating: 3.62 | 2618 Users | 172 Reviews

Itemize Regarding Books Buffalo Girls
| Title | : | Buffalo Girls |
| Author | : | Larry McMurtry |
| Book Format | : | Paperback |
| Book Edition | : | Anniversary Edition |
| Pages | : | Pages: 352 pages |
| Published | : | November 13th 2001 by Simon Schuster (first published 1990) |
| Categories | : | Fiction. Westerns. Historical. Historical Fiction |
Explanation Supposing Books Buffalo Girls
In a letter to her daughter back East, Martha Jane is not shy about her own importance: "Martha Jane -- better known as Calamity -- is just one of the handful of aging legends who travel to London as part of Buffalo Bill Cody's Wild West Show in Buffalo Girls. As he describes the insatiable curiosity of Calamity's Indian friend No Ears, Annie Oakley's shooting match with Lord Windhouveren, and other highlights of the tour, McMurtry turns the story of a band of hardy, irrepressible survivors into an unforgettable portrait of love, fellowship, dreams, and heartbreak.Declare Books In Favor Of Buffalo Girls
| Original Title: | Buffalo Girls |
| ISBN: | 0743216296 (ISBN13: 9780743216296) |
| Edition Language: | English |
Rating Regarding Books Buffalo Girls
Ratings: 3.62 From 2618 Users | 172 ReviewsArticle Regarding Books Buffalo Girls
One of my favorite quotes of all times comes from this book:"Out west, no one is too crazy to hang."Thoroughly enjoyed this audio book on a long drive through the back country in Oregon.
I just finished this book for the second time. Its a wonderful story built on very few facts, alas. Yes, many characters were real, but I looked up Calamity herself, and her real life was quite different...she did marry, she did have children. I was disappointed. I enjoy the writing, I enjoy the story, and of course McMurtry would spin new tales upon the history, but I had trusted his research to be more present. I still recommend the book for pleasurable reading, and whos to say the authors

A fictional story of Calamity Jane. Several characters are real (Annie Oakley, Buffalo Bill Cody, Sitting Bull) others are based on real people, all are fictionalized. It's the story of people who live beyond their time - in this case the Wild West after it was tamed. It's a beautiful sad story I've read many times. Betty Buckley reads the audio version and she is just heartbreakingly wonderful.
Very, very disappointing as I have other McMurtry novels on my shelves (Lonesome Dove, Leaving Cheyenne, The Last Picture Show, Texasville) and have thoroughly enjoyed each and every one of them. I looked forward to Buffalo Girls as another enjoyable read. Boy, was I let down. The entire story revolves around Calamity Jane and her ability (or inability) to adapt to changes that the Wild West is going through during the mid 19th century. The indians are gone from the plains, there are no more
Calamity Jane. Dora DuFran. Wild Bill Hickok. Buffalo Bill Cody. Mountain men, Indians, miners, cowboys, and a big overgrown sweetheart of a young man named Ogden. (And Fred the parrot.)Some were actual people, with their stories tweaked a bit to fit into McMurtry's plot lines. Others were invented. (Fred the parrot was real.)The glory days of the Old West are over. The buffalo are gone, so are the beaver. The life itself is gone. Civilization has arrived. What are living legends supposed to do
An old compliment to actors that you rarely hear anymore is, "I'd listen to him read the phone book," and I thought of that as I was reading Buffalo Girls. When it comes to Larry McMurtry, I'd read it if he wrote the phone book because, as plotless as it might be, he would somehow manage to convey in it all the pain of daily living. Not that Buffalo Girls has no plot, but it's a thin one; it's mostly just a few old characters coming to grips with the fact that the time of the American West as an

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