Larry McMurtry, a prolific novelist and screenwriter who demythologized the American West with his unromantic depictions of life on the 19th-century frontier and in contemporary small-town Texas, died Thursday. He was 84.
The death was confirmed by Amanda Lundberg, a spokesperson for the family. She did not specify a cause or say where he died.
Over more than five decades, McMurtry wrote more than 30 novels and many books of essays, memoir and history. He also wrote more than 30 screenplays, including the one for "Brokeback Mountain" (written with his longtime collaborator Diana Ossana, based on a short story by Annie Proulx), for which he won an Academy Award in 2006.
But he found his greatest commercial and critical success with "Lonesome Dove," a sweeping 843-page novel about two retired Texas Rangers who drive a herd of stolen cattle from the Rio Grande to Montana in the 1870s. The book won a Pulitzer Prize in 1986 and was made into a popular television miniseries.
McMurtry wrote "Lonesome Dove" as an anti-Western, a rebuke of sorts to the romantic notions of dime-store novels and an exorcism of the false ghosts in the work of writers like Louis L'Amour. "I'm a critic of the myth of the cowboy," he told an interviewer in 1988. "I don't feel that it's a myth that pertains, and since it's a part of my heritage I feel it's a legitimate task to criticize it."
But readers warmed to the vivid characters in "Lonesome Dove." McMurtry himself ultimately likened it, in terms of its sweep, to a Western "Gone With the Wind."
McMurtry was the son of a rancher, and the realism in his books extended to the Texas he knew as a young man. His first novel, "Horseman, Pass By" (1961), examined the values of the Old West as they came into conflict with the modern world.
Reviewing the novel in The New York Times Book Review, Texas historian Wayne Gard wrote, "The cow hands ride horses less often than pickup trucks or Cadillacs. And in the evening, instead of sitting around a campfire strumming guitars and singing, 'Git along, little dogie,' they are more likely to have a game at the pool hall, drink beer and try their charms on any girls they can find."