The Way West

This article is about the 1949 novel. For the film, see The Way West (film).
For the Chinese classic novel, see Journey to the West.
The Way West (novel)

First edition
Author A. B. Guthrie, Jr.
Country United States
Language English
Genre Western fiction
Publisher William Sloane Associates
Publication date
1949
Media type Print (Hardback & Paperback)
Preceded by The Big Sky
Followed by These Thousand Hills

The Way West is a 1949 western novel by A. B. Guthrie, Jr. (descendant of a family that traveled west).[1] The novel won the Pulitzer Prize for Fiction in 1950. The book became the basis for a film starring Kirk Douglas, Robert Mitchum, and Richard Widmark.

The novel is one in the sequence of six by A. B. Guthrie, Jr. dealing with the Oregon Trail and the development of Montana from 1830, the time of the mountain men, to "the cattle empire of the 1880s to the near present.".[2] The publication sequence started with The Big Sky,[3] then proceeded to The Way West,[4] These Thousand Hills,[5] Arfive (1971), The Last Valley (1975), and Fair Land, Fair Land.[6]

The first three books of the six in the chronological sequence (but not in the sequence of publishing)—The Big Sky, The Way West, and Fair Land, Fair Land—are in themselves a complete trilogy, starting in 1830 with Boone Caudill leaving Kentucky to become a mountain man and ending with the death of Caudill and later the death of Dick Summers in the 1870s. For Wallace Stegner The Big Sky is "the best" of the six novels in Guthrie's sequence.[7] As popular and highly regarded as had been The Big Sky, The Way West was the novel in the sequence to be formally honored with the Pulitzer Prize for fiction.

Plot introduction

Former senator William Tadlock leads a wagon train along the Oregon Trail from Missouri with the help of hired guide Dick Summers. After several accidents which cost settlers' lives, a mutiny of sorts develops and his position is overtaken by Lije Evans. Soon, different factions develop amongst the people of the train as they try to survive their trek to Oregon.

Release details

References

  1. "The Way West (review)". Retrieved 2011-09-20.
  2. 1965 Forward by Wallace Stegner to A.B. Guthrie, Jr., The Big Sky, Houghton Mifflin Company, published 1947/renewed 1974.
  3. The Big Sky (1947)
  4. The Way West (1949)
  5. These Thousand Hills (1956)
  6. Fair Land, Fair Land (1982)
  7. The Big Sky, 1965 Forward by Wallace Stegner.

External links

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