![]() Rooster himself is a teller of tall tales. ![]() Interestingly, there's a hint throughout the novel that "the true account of how I avenged Frank Ross's blood over in the Choctaw Nation" is not a true account at all, but rather a tall tale written by a successful, eccentric, misunderstood woman who is attempting to make sense of her adult life as she ages. Q: You don't hear a voice like Mattie's much in American fiction - an independent girl, looking for a father surrogate and experiencing some disturbing signs of sexual awakening, all in some of the most violent and grisly conditions you could imagine.Ī: That's right. "Your pard has killed you and I have done for him." As Moon is dying, Mattie coolly observes, "Here is what was in his eyes: confusion." "I can do nothing for you, son," says Rooster to the mortally wounded bandit Moon. ![]() In its rather clinical view of death, True Grit rivals the hardboiled world of Red Harvest-era Dashiell Hammett and prefigures Cormac McCarthy by 20 years. Is there a more violent book than the Bible? The "eye for an eye" ethos of the Old Testament has definitely made an impact on our heroine. Less so, however, if one considers how deeply moralistic by way of scripture she is. Q: How does Mattie's matter-of-fact view of Cogburn's grisly brand of frontier justice square with her high-Presbyterian priggishness in the realm of personal morality? Why does Cogburn embody "grit" when he's blowing away outlaws, but a sinfulness when he drinks and plays cards?Ī: The novel's dispassionate look at violence as seen through the eyes of Mattie is, at first read, remarkable. I don't think anyone has come close to what Portis achieved with this book. (Ned Pepper: "I call that bold talk for a one-eyed fat man!" Rooster Cogburn: "Fill your hand, you sonofabitch!") Portis' novel was a revelation and in every way surpassed my experience with the film, which is one I like very much indeed, and view often to this day. When I finally did get around to reading the book, I found that most of the famous dialogue from the film was lifted verbatim from the novel. I first saw the film in 1969 with my dad. ![]() Q: How did you come to read True Grit? Did you, like most of us, see the movie first?Ī: I did not read many books at all until I was in my twenties, so it would have been then, or perhaps later. George Pelecanos, a master of contemporary noir fiction set in Washington D.C., hails Portis' debut work of fiction as "one of the very best American novels." It's a dark coming-of-age tale told in the deceptively innocent voice of a 14-year-old frontier girl, Mattie Ross, who seeks vengeance for the murder of her father in the years just after the Civil War. But Charles Portis' novel, published in 1968, is even better. True Grit is best known as a movie - directed by noir and Western hand Henry Hathaway and featuring John Wayne's sole Oscar-winning performance as drink-and trigger-happy federal marshal Rooster Cogburn. His next novel, The Night Gardener, will be published in August. He is a writer and producer on the acclaimed HBO series The Wire. His 2000 novel Right as Rain is in development with Warner Brothers and director Curtis Hanson ( LA Confidential). George Pelecanos writes crime novels highlighting the struggles of daily life in working-class Washington, D.C.
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