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When the Light Goes: A Novel
When the Light Goes: A Novel

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Author: Larry Mcmurtry
Publisher: Simon & Schuster
Category: Book

List Price: $24.00
Buy New: $5.49
You Save: $18.51 (77%)



New (8) Used (10) from $3.70

Avg. Customer Rating: 3.5 out of 5 stars 36 reviews
Sales Rank: 99762

Format: Bargain Price
Media: Hardcover
Edition: 1
Number Of Items: 1
Pages: 208
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.7
Dimensions (in): 9.2 x 6.5 x 1.2

Dewey Decimal Number: 813.54
ASIN: B000WPODVU

Publication Date: March 6, 2007
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days

Also Available In:

  • Paperback - When the Light Goes: A Novel
  • Hardcover - When the Light Goes: A Novel
  • Hardcover - When the Light Goes

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Editorial Reviews:

Product Description
In this masterful and often surprising sequel to the acclaimed Duane's Depressed, the Pulitzer Prize- and Oscar-winning author of Lonesome Dove has written a haunting, elegiac, and occasionally erotic novel about one of his most beloved characters. Duane Moore first made his appearance in The Last Picture Showand, like his author, he has aged but not lost his vigor or his taste for life.

Back from a two-week trip to Egypt, Duane finds he cannot readjust to life in Thalia, the small, dusty, West Texas hometown in which he has spent all of his life. In the short time he was away, it seems that everything has changed alarmingly. His office barely has a reason to exist now that his son Dickie is running the company from Wichita Falls, his lifelong friends seem to have suddenly grown old, his familiar hangout, once a good old-fashioned convenience store, has been transformed into an "Asian Wonder Deli," his daughters seem to have taken leave of their senses and moved on to new and strange lives, and his own health is at serious risk.

It's as if Duane cannot find any solace or familiarity in Thalia and cannot even bring himself to revisit the house he shared for decades with his late wife, Karla, and their children and grandchildren. He spends his days aimlessly riding his bicycle (already a sign of serious eccentricity in West Texas) and living in his cabin outside town. The more he tries to get back to the rhythm of his old life, the more he realizes that he should have left Thalia long ago -- indeed everybody he cared for seems to have moved on without him, to new lives or to death.

The only consolation is meeting the young, attractive geologist, Annie Cameron, whom Dickie has hired to work out of the Thalia office. Annie is brazenlyseductive, yet oddly cold, young enough to be Duane's daughter, or worse, and Duane hasn't a clue how to handle her. He's also in love with his psychiatrist, Honor Carmichael, who after years of rebuffing him, has decided to undertake what she feels is Duane's very necessary sex reeducation, opening him up to some major, life-changing surprises.

For the lesson of When the Light Goes is that where there's life, there is indeed hope -- Duane, widowed, displaced from whatever is left of his own life, suddenly rootless in the middle of his own hometown, and at risk of death from a heart that also doesn't seem to be doing its job, is in the end saved by sex, by love, and by his own compassionate and intense interest in other people and the surprises they reveal.

At once realistic and life-loving, often hilariously funny, and always moving, though without a touch of sentimentality, Larry McMurtry has opened up a new chapter in Duane's life and, in doing so, written one of his finest and most compelling novels to date, doing for Duane what he did so triumphantly for Aurora in Terms of Endearment.


Customer Reviews:   Read 31 more reviews...

3 out of 5 stars Duane's Finale. . . .   March 6, 2007
 19 out of 19 found this review helpful

I was very excited to receive an advance copy of this book a few weeks ago, Mr. McMurtry is one of my all time favorite writers, and a true national treasure. I have read almost all of his books, his westerns being my favorites (Lonesome Dove is "THE GREAT AMERICAN NOVEL" in my opinion). I have to admit though that this slim little book is not his most engaging work. The story wraps up the life of character Duane Moore who readers were introduce to in "the Last Picture Show" and we have followed his life through "Texasville" and "Duane's Depressed." Duane is just back from a trip to Egypt, a little time away after losing his wife Karla. He comes back to the small town of Thalia to find it being lost to urban sprawl. His is life fading, his children have moved on and the business no longer needs him. More importantly with the loss of Karla he is alone. In walks a young flirty computer expert Anne Cameron. This is where the story lost it for me, the relationship between Duane and Anne just seemed weird. I also did not care for the detailed sex descriptions (I am no prude, they just were not relevant to the story).

Despite the books weaknesses I am still give the book three stars as I was curious to see what happened to Duane, and there are still some great moments when McMurty's satire is dead on that make this book a worthwhile read. If you like McMurtry I also Recommend "Across the High Lonesome" which I read after seeing McMurtry gave it a good review.Across the High Lonesome



5 out of 5 stars Survivor Duane   March 3, 2007
 9 out of 10 found this review helpful

What a great book! Just when you think McMurtry can't pull anything out of his bag of tricks, here comes a slim wonderful volume about starrin Duane Moore. McMurtry presents Moore with a new dilemma, told with his signature sympathy and compassion that makes him one of our best storytellers writing today. Many contemporary writers can take lessons from McMurtry on sheer storytelling genius.

The only flaw in this story was the detailed sex sequences, though at the same time you get a character that is reacting to the current influence of telling everyone way too many details about their private lives.

Long live Duane and long live the writing genius of McMurtry. McMurtry is one of our national treasures, pure storytelling bliss!



5 out of 5 stars So that's how someone ends up retired in Patagonia!   March 8, 2007
 8 out of 11 found this review helpful


This is the fourth book following Duane from The Last Picture Show" in 1966,220 pages;followed by "Texasville" in 1987,542pages; followed again by "Duane's Depressed" in 1999,431 pages;and now "When the light Goes" in 2007,195 pages. It is a great read,but all too short by any standard. The book isn't even really 195 pages.The novel has been broken up into 48 chapters,many only a couple of pages,each starting half way down the page,many half pages of print, and 27 blank pages.When this is all taken into account,the novel is only really about 140 pages long.I won't try to summarize the story since the reviewer ahead of me has already done a good job of that.This little novel reminds me of a couple of things. In my youth,I spent a lot of time in the local Pool Hall.There was an expression that was very often thrown out when a "novice" was on the losing end of a game; "The lesson, you paid for; the experience is free." In this novel ,I guess the appropriate line might be; "The story,you paid for;the sex lesson is free."
The second thing that this book reminded me of was a birding trip I took to Arizona a few years ago.Patagonia is one of the most famous "birding hot spots" in North America. While I found the birding super there,I wondered why anyone would want to retire to such a remote place. Duane sure seemed to find a reason.
What else can I say,it may even be McMurtry at his best; but much,much,too short. What do you think? Could it be made into a movie? Now there's a challenge for you;if there ever was one!



4 out of 5 stars Don't forget the appetizers!   March 16, 2007
 6 out of 7 found this review helpful

Disclaimer: If there is a bigger McMurtry fan on the planet, I haven't met him or her. That said, whether in conversation or a written review like this one, I'll ordinarily start with five stars and challenge the world to prove otherwise. But in this book's case, there's a simple explanation for my one-star demerit: I just have a hard time seeing how it can stand on its own.

"When the Light Goes" MUST be read in the context of its prequels, "The Last Picture Show," "Texasville," and especially "Duane's Depressed." Otherwise, it comes off as a lazy effort with cheap dialog, crude descriptions and gratuitous sex, and readers will soon find themselves wondering if they're missing some ingenious literary device - if they care enough to wonder at all.

That's a shame, because this book has so many wonderful attributes. There's McMurtry's classic ability to tell a story, deliver timely humor, pace the events, and develop a rich setting with barely an adjective. If fact, short story writers should (and can) eat this compact book for breakfast, thanks to McMurtry's skills with metaphor which time after time provide nearly all the atmosphere needed.

In the publisher's blurbs on the dust cover, much is made of how Duane is ultimately "saved" by sex. I'm not so sure. It may help sell a few more books, but I think the more powerful undercurrents in this book include the fleshing out of fringe characters from previous novels, the town of Thalia and its oldest inhabitants moving in opposite directions, and especially the spontaneity of things like passage on a freighter from Egypt, Duane's abandonment of the little cabin he just as spontaneously moved into despite his wealth, and other unfathomable episodes.

Sometimes I judge a book by how much I'd enjoy reading it a second time. This is a very enjoyable book, but it wouldn't make that cut. I will say this much, though: it will be a long time before I forget that opening paragraph.



5 out of 5 stars More than I bargained for   March 18, 2007
 6 out of 6 found this review helpful

I liked this book for several reasons. Texasville was the first novel I ever read in my life. I was nine years old. I have since read that one probably fifteen times or maybe more. I thought Duane's Depressed was the saddest book I have ever read. I am a huge fan of Larry McMurtry, and therefore probably biased. I would also strongly recommend reading the other three books in this series before this one. His last few books have been (to most people's ire) shorter ones that he was writing twenty years ago. To me, he is saying more with fewer words, and he is doing it very well. This book says a lot more than any other 195 page book that I have ever read. That is because it had three other books to set the stage for it. It is interesting that in Duane's Depressed and The Evening Star, Mr. McMurtry mentions Proust. Mostly what he says about Remembrance of Things Past in those two books is how daunting it is to try to get through it, the main reason being that it is so long. Mr. McMurtry always seems to be way ahead of the rest of the literary field with ideas that make good novels. I think with the last few he has put out (Telegraph Days, each of the Berrybender novels, Loop Group, the Boone's Lick, and the non-fiction stuff like Roads, Paradise, and Walter Benjamin at the Dairy Queen) he has been looking for a way for the words to pack more of a punch, therefore making the need for one thousand page epics not so great.
It has also been a great debate over his career about whether he is regional, local, national, worldwide, or whatever. One way to look at it is to say that even though anyone can read a Larry McMurtry book and enjoy it, people who are from or have been around Texas very much can REALLY identify with his writing. More so than any other Texas author.
When the Light Goes and the other three novels in this series each capture perfectly the attitudes and nuances of small Texas oilpatch towns over a span of a fifty year period. I can't think of anything I have read that comes close to that sort of thing except maybe Updike's Rabbit. My view, being a Texan, is that Larry McMurtry is an international talent and an absolute Texas treasure.


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