Search Advanced SearchView Cart   Checkout   
 Location:  Home » MP3 & Media Players » General » When the Light Goes: A Novel  
Media Players
MP3 & Media Players
Related Categories
• General
Literature & Fiction
Bargain Books
Custom Stores
Specialty Stores
• Subjects
Books
• Hardcover
Binding (binding)
Refinements
Books
• Bargain Books
Promotion (special_merchandising_browse-bin)
Refinements
Books
• Printed Books
Format (feature_browse-bin)
Refinements
Books
Subcategories
Arts & Photography
Biographies & Memoirs
Business & Investing
Children's Books
Comics & Graphic Novels
Computers & Internet
Cooking, Food & Wine
Entertainment
Gay & Lesbian
Health, Mind & Body
History
Home & Garden
Law
Literature & Fiction
Medicine
Mystery & Thrillers
Nonfiction
Outdoors & Nature
Parenting & Families
Professional & Technical
Reference
Religion & Spirituality
Romance
Science
Science Fiction & Fantasy
Sports
Teens
Travel

When the Light Goes: A Novel

When the Light Goes: A Novel

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

List Price: $24.00
Buy New: $5.43
You Save: $18.57 (77%)



New (8) Used (10) from $3.95

Rating: 3.5 out of 5 stars 36 reviews
Sales Rank: 111703

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

Similar Items:

  • Telegraph Days: A Novel
  • Duane's Depressed : A Novel
  • Oh What a Slaughter: Massacres in the American West: 1846--1890
  • Walter Benjamin at the Dairy Queen : Reflections on Sixty and Beyond
  • Books: A Memoir

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 A quick, easy but flawed read   October 24, 2008
When the Light Goes is a good, quick read. I occasionally pick up a Larry McMurtry novel as a change of pace. His prose in this novel is very loose and moves very quickly, aided by the very short chapters. McMyrtry's description of aging accompanied by illness and lack of virility seems accurate, at least for his main character Duane. However, other than Duane, all the characters seemed a bit two dimensional. It held my attention for 200 pages, but it would have lost me if it was much longer. Also, this reader, although not squeamish, could have done withy out some of the overly graphic sexuality. Like too much of the rest of the book, it made sex very two dimensional and lacked any true feeling or emotion. What a shame for a writer who is capable of so much better!


1 out of 5 stars soft porn   September 24, 2008
This book was nothing more than soft porn. How did I get sucked into this one. And, yes, I meant the double entendre.


2 out of 5 stars Put Out The Light, Please   September 16, 2008
Duane's World, Part IV

I have recently fulsomely praised Larry McMurtry's The Last Picture Show trilogy (The Last Picture Show; Texasville: Duane's Depressed) a saga centered on the coming of age, mid-life crisis and struggle with mortality of one small town Texas oilman and good old boy Duane Moore. Frankly, I thought with the review of Duane's Depressed concerning Duane's struggle to find relevance in his life as he hovers around old age and faces the grim reaper that I was done with this series. Needless to say that was not the case. Although I wish it were so.

I mentioned in my review of The Last Picture Show that the coming of age story described there boiled down to what to do on high school Friday night-the search for sexual companionship. What to do on high school Saturday night-the search for sex- you get the drift. Apparently in his dotage Duane is hung up on that same aspect of the tragedy behind that human drive except he has included weekdays. That, however, is not enough to sustain this slim novel. Moreover, I believe that Mr. McMurtry knows that as he has tried to spruce up his plot and characters with every current sociological trend known to the American scene- the search for a trophy wife, daughter Nellie's gayness, daughter Julie's nunnery prospects, his lesbian psychiatrist's off-hand desire to throw away all her profession ethics for a chance to go to bed with Duane and the South Asian invasion of the mom and pop business marketplace, reliance on sexual aids, etc. Come on now, Larry this is not even Austin.

I once commented in a review of Howard Fast's Immigrant series set in California over a couple of generations that during the course of the work his characters intersected every possible leftist political impulse in pursue of filling out the story line. I mentioned, at some point well before the last book, that the series had run out of steam. That, sad to say, has happened to Mr. McMurtry here. His story has run out of steam. What is left? Duane as the "stud" at his Thalia (or Wichita Falls) assisted living facility. He deserves better. Larry, put out the light. Please.




1 out of 5 stars A so-so old-guy porn fantasy   September 14, 2008
I am roughly Duane's age in the book, and after hearing a brief description, I was looking forward to a story of re-awakening and perhaps passion for an old guy like me. Instead, I believe this is something McMurtry dashed off in an afternoon after waking up horny after a nap. There is barely a realistic character or situation in this very slim book. The sex scenes with his very unlikely partners seem right out of the trashy porno paperbacks that we secretly passed around as teenage boys so many decades ago. The non-sex events are usually described in a very detached way, leaving you to wonder if it was supposed to be humorous or existential, then you realize he just wanted to tick off the plot points quickly to get to the next (often curiously detached) sex scene. A great disappointment--despite McMurtry's great talents, I can't think of anything to recommend this book.



4 out of 5 stars Lonely Days, Lonely Nights   September 1, 2008
I'm 54 yrs old and a big fan of McMurtry. Just finished the book and though not a classic I enjoyed it very much. I'll admit that it may have a lot to do with the fact that I'm 54 (Duane's 64) and it gives me hope. Hope that a beutiful 26 yr old California girl could enter my life and want me. Ha! My 50 yr old wife seems more interested in her flower garden. I also very much enjoy his characters. I think the author enjoyed writing frankly about sex. Why not it's a great part of life. I think there is a lot of autobiographical material in the book. The author had heart surgery in his 60s and I think he appreciates beautiful women and a sex life. All a man wants is a little laughter, some friendships, a good meal & a little wine plus some action in bed. McMurtry, like Duane, knows the end of life is just around the corner & a whole bunch of us are not counting on an afterlife.

We take your privacy very seriously. Copyright(c) 2008 MagiMedia.com
All Rights Reserved.

MP3 & Media Players