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willoughbyreads's review against another edition
2.0
Certainly an entertaining story, however, I had a hard time believing that high school kids in 1950s Texas acted the way that the characters in this story were portrayed. There were orgies with farm animals, unsupervised teenagers who boldly stripteased in front of each other and went skinny dipping, and a high school kid who was sleeping with the football coach's wife. I can't imagine those things happening today, let alone 70 years ago in such a conservative part of the country.
The theme seemed to be loneliness and a search for meaning in life. There were so many people in this small town that just wanted someone to love them. Nothing more and nothing less. This particular element of the story was quite true-to-life. The struggle is real. But the result is a somber tone throughout. Some of the characters seemed resolved to the fact that their fates were unchangeable. That doesn't make for an uplifting story, and most people read to escape circumstances that are very similar.
The theme seemed to be loneliness and a search for meaning in life. There were so many people in this small town that just wanted someone to love them. Nothing more and nothing less. This particular element of the story was quite true-to-life. The struggle is real. But the result is a somber tone throughout. Some of the characters seemed resolved to the fact that their fates were unchangeable. That doesn't make for an uplifting story, and most people read to escape circumstances that are very similar.
dianarain's review against another edition
4.0
A lonely country that has nothing to offer these kids and even less to offer as they grow into a desperate adulthood.
mutney44's review against another edition
3.0
3.5 stars. Wonderfully crafted. I love reading about small town Texas, but at times it was a bit depressing, mostly because I have seen some of these characters in small towns all over the nation. I'm glad I read it.
smilejosh's review against another edition
dark
emotional
funny
reflective
sad
medium-paced
- Plot- or character-driven? Character
- Strong character development? Yes
- Loveable characters? Yes
- Diverse cast of characters? Yes
- Flaws of characters a main focus? Yes
5.0
A lot more horny than I expected. It’s a good balance of sad and funny.
nitishpahwa's review against another edition
4.0
Almost everyone in The Last Picture Show fucks, but the ennui and disappointment that pervades their small-town, plain-in-the-plains lives affect their libido and their passion that charges it as well. Implicit in the sex is aspiration: escape from Thalia, Texas; more attention from the citizens of Thalia, Texas; the manhood and womanhood so seemingly essential and exclusive to the act, which helps determine status in Thalia, Texas. Besides, what else is there? You can go the picture show, hardly pay attention to the movies while you neck in the back. You can go shoot pool and get smoked by the same players, or watch the same players smoke the same victims. You can eat sausages and drink coffee served by the same waitress you fancy each time. You can work, in oil, or roughnecking, or managing couple businesses that attract the same customers in the same hours of day and night. You can watch the high school's football and basketball games, see the team get beat down brutally each time. Everything's respectable and of routine in Thalia—so damn dull that sex is the only source of excitement and life, that is until it becomes a routine of its own, or it's taken away and it breaks your heart.
So, yeah, it's not much of a life, and the citizens who live it—characters of rich attributes, sometimes repugnant, but extremely human—make a tense peace with it or try to escape it, and themselves, however much they can. The adolescents of Thalia, the ones on the cusps, are the main stars of the novels, but the disaffected adults have their neuroses too, whether it's their bigotries or their baggage, born of their lifelong desolation, both physical and emotional. Since there's little in their immediate environs to shape them, they shape each other, taking out their frustration and desperation and affecting each other far more than they realize. And though their immediate world seems staid, the world at large is not, and neither are their ages or lives. So some folks will pass on or pass through, and the picture show will play its last flick, and you might as well go to catch it.
So, yeah, it's not much of a life, and the citizens who live it—characters of rich attributes, sometimes repugnant, but extremely human—make a tense peace with it or try to escape it, and themselves, however much they can. The adolescents of Thalia, the ones on the cusps, are the main stars of the novels, but the disaffected adults have their neuroses too, whether it's their bigotries or their baggage, born of their lifelong desolation, both physical and emotional. Since there's little in their immediate environs to shape them, they shape each other, taking out their frustration and desperation and affecting each other far more than they realize. And though their immediate world seems staid, the world at large is not, and neither are their ages or lives. So some folks will pass on or pass through, and the picture show will play its last flick, and you might as well go to catch it.
prettybluefairy75's review against another edition
DNF. Couldn't get into it. I may try again at a later date.
tylermcgaughey's review against another edition
3.0
McMurtry was still a developing writer when he wrote this one and it shows in some of the descriptions, which tend to overexplain what the reader can infer for themselves. Still, the sense of desolation and repressed sadness of a dying small town comes across strongly, especially in the last 50 pages or so, and this is what really makes the book linger in the mind.
elleyureled's review against another edition
5.0
I really didn't think that I would enjoy this book as much as I did. The interesting thing is that the three central character were not the reason why I enjoyed the book.