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Women's Fiction
Lasso the Wind : Away to the New West

Lasso the Wind : Away to the New West

List Price: $13.00
Your Price: $9.75
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A wide-eyed look at the west w/o rose-colored glasses
Review: After reading 'A Good Rain' a number of years ago, I couldn't wait for Egan's next book. And I was not disappointed. Egan casts aside the romantic visions and fanatasies about the real West, and gives his readers a large dose of reality and fact. As with his previous book, I felt myself both incredibly drawn by his accounts, descriptions and history of his subjects - while at the same time agonizing for the atrocities carried out by my predecessors. Egan's prose perfectly captures the geography of the west in a way few authors have been able to.

'Lasso the Wind' falls under the "must read" category for anyone living, working or studying in the West...regardless of whether they are a 5th generation rancher or a 1st generation Sierra Club volunteer.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Great Mix of History, Sociology and Travel Book
Review: As a native Californian who has visited most of the places in Egan's book, I can say he got it right. This is one of the best books I've read this year because it cleverly mixes sociology, history, travel book and future-predicting. Between this book and Tony Horwitz' Confederates in the Attic (which is a similarly mixed book about the South) I learned a lot about the South and the West. Now if only someone would take on Northeast and the Midwest...

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Demolishes the mythology of the John Wayne West
Review: Egan's 14 chapters on various locales of the interior West slowly, but completely, demolish the mythology of perhaps the most mythologized part of the United States -- the West, or more properly, the West that is east of the Sierra Nevada and the Cascades.

Those politicians and groups who are out to "save the West" from city dwellers, newcomers and environmentalists will not like this book, but everyone interested in the West will find Egan's description and commentary arresting.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Terrific sociology, history, and following of footsteps
Review: Egan's direct, profound insight make this socio-history of the West remarkable. From tracing the paths of writers like Edward Abbey, to carving out a new perspective on the way the West is currently being won, Egan's book is an important read, especially for easterners and midwesterners removed from the issues the book presents. The West's immigrant communities and its continuing demographic migrations, as Egan points out, will shape America's future. The only criticism I have is that he doesn't delve into California sufficiently. The book ends with a look at California and some broad, bold statements about it. But, he doesn't present the same kind of historical analysis on California as he does with the rest of the West, and this leaves a reader wanting more or at least and explanation for his statements. However, for great insight into the modern sociology of Utah, Arizona, and New Mexico, this book offers a thorough and entertaining analysis.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Destroys the popular mythology of the West
Review: Extremely well written, with use of irony, sarcasm, humor to make the reader realize how ridiculous the pioneer, shoot-em-up western image is, when compared to Native American customs. There are some spooky people out west.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A new natural history
Review: I am an Australian who has never been to the United States, so I might be coming at this book from a different perspective to many.

I thought the writing was wonderfully evocative, both in the positive descriptions (eg. the Western landscape) and the negative descriptions (eg. the stupidity of cows). I got a real sense of the beauty of the land.

I thought the social and political aspect of the book was also really interesting because it took a view of American history which doesn't assume that you know who Thomas Jefferson was, but still requires some intelligence from the reader. Rather than just rubbishing traditional Western lifestyles, Egan engages with and explores them. He then offers some possible future solutions which are interesting and seem practical.

I found the way Egan combined natural and political and social and demographic history into one whole comprehensible theory fantastic.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A journalist's view of the West, both jaundiced and hopeful
Review: I don't often read nonfiction books that make me laugh out loud, but this one did. Egan is something of a gonzo journalist, taking on the vast subject of the American West and finding in it cause for both wonder and humor. The book is a collection of 14 essays, in which the author travels to places in 11 different states, giving readers plenty of local history, descriptions of dramatic landscapes, and a portrayal of "custom and culture" that reels under colliding visions of what the West should be. At every turn, he has an eye for ironies that both reveal and entertain.

After an introduction that takes place at a conference in Jackson Hole, Wyoming, he begins his journey in New Mexico and Arizona, then moves northward, swinging through Colorado, Montana, and the Great Basin states, ending in California. There is much about cowboys, cattlemen, and Native Americans. We also visit London Bridge at Lake Havasu, an ostrich ranch outside Denver, the pit left behind by the Anaconda copper mining company in Butte, the casinos of Las Vegas, and the site of an appearance of the Virgin of Guadalupe on the back of a road sign in Sunnyside, Washington. There are accounts of fishing in the Bitterroots of Idaho, river rafting on the American River above Sacramento, and hunting for Anasazi petroglyphs in the canyons of the Escalante in Utah.

Meanwhile history comes alive from a colorful and sometimes jaundiced perspective in stories of the conquistador Don Juan de Oñate's conquest of the Indians at Acoma in New Mexico, the massacre of a wagon train of settlers by Mormons at Mountain Meadows, Utah, in the 1860s, and the California Gold Rush. There are historical figures who make vivid appearances, including Theodore Roosevelt, John Muir, Lewis and Clark, and Brigham Young. The most affecting story is the author's retelling of Chief Joseph and the fate of the Nez Perce.

Egan gives us a whirlwind trip across a vast area of the U.S. He touches on themes that are common in books about the west -- the follies and vanities of those who have defied the realities of its arid climate, laid waste to natural resources, decimated its wildlife, and attempted to eradicate its native populations. While there is much to lament in what it reveals of the devastation brought by settlement of the West, it also seeks earnestly for signs that the spirit of the West still survives and can eventually thrive.

I highly recommend this book as an addition to any bookshelf of Western nonfiction. As a companion volume, I also recommend Frank Clifford's "The Backbone of the World," which recounts a similar journey by a journalist across the states that lie along the Continental Divide.

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: Conventional Prejudice
Review: I received the book as a gift, but it only took me one chapter to wish I hadn't received it. I personally know something of what that chapter is about, and to my disappointment the author was not only inaccurate, shallow and unintelligent in his analysis, but he is solidly locked into the conventional prejudices one would expect, I suppose, from a writer for the N.Y. Times -- the typical liberal urbanite arrogance towards people who live on the land and work with their hands close to nature, people who produce the resources we depend on. The author thinks he is demolishing myths, but actually he succumbs to the latest trendy myths of his social set.

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: Conventional Prejudice
Review: I received the book as a gift, but it only took me one chapter to wish I hadn't received it. I personally know something of what that chapter is about, and to my disappointment the author was not only inaccurate, shallow and unintelligent in his analysis, but he is solidly locked into the conventional prejudices one would expect, I suppose, from a writer for the N.Y. Times -- the typical liberal urbanite arrogance towards people who live on the land and work with their hands close to nature, people who produce the resources we depend on. The author thinks he is demolishing myths, but actually he succumbs to the latest trendy myths of his social set.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Who owns Western land ?
Review: In general this book explores the character of the West and considers opinions about who owns it. For the most part, Egan writes about the mountain states. Much of the text consists of clear and gripping accounts of historical events that capture the forces motivating people to grab a piece of the west, e.g., money, personal freedom, love of wilderness. One brilliant aspect of the book is that Egan can simultaneously present facts, editorial comment and provide a lucid picture of what is valuable about Western lands.

I'll underline the thrust of one thread of Egan's book: Much of the West consists of federally owned lands that are the property of all americans, whether they live in urban areas or not, whether they are "latte-sipping weanies" or third-generation ranchers. This is no "liberal urbanite " bias this is a fact. The best evidence of political bias is found in the history of tax-payer-subsidized resource extraction on federal lands. This massive, decades-old rip-off has lined the pockets of conservative politicians and their mining, logging and ranching buddies, not liberal urbanites.


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