Cowboys are my weakness Stories

Pam Houston

Book - 2019

"In Pam Houston's best-selling story collection, we meet smart women who are looking for the love of a good man, and men who are wild and hard to pin down. Our heroines are part daredevil, part philosopher, all acute observers of the nuances of modern romance. Cowboys Are My Weakness is a shrewd and intoxicating look at men and women - together and apart."-- Back cover.

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Subjects
Genres
Short stories
Linked stories
Published
New York ; London : W.W. Norton 2019.
Language
English
Main Author
Pam Houston (author)
Item Description
Originally published in 1992.
Physical Description
ix, 165 pages ; 21 cm
ISBN
9780393356878
  • How to talk to a hunter
  • Selway
  • Highwater
  • For Bo
  • What Shock heard
  • Dall
  • Cowboys are my weakness
  • Jackson is only one of my dogs
  • A blizzard under blue sky
  • Sometimes you talk about Idaho
  • Symphony
  • In my next life.
Review by Booklist Review

Houston is an exciting writer. She has a gift for conveying a sense of place charged with mystery and wonder, whether it be while hunting Alaskan bighorn sheep, white-water rafting, trekking in the mountains, or feeling the emptiness, foreboding, and promise of a Catheresque prairie. Her women are always strong--though sometimes caught in dependent relationships--surviving cold, wet, pain, broken bones, bears, rape, and the death of love. Her men are variations on a theme: always, in their silence, imbued by her heroines with their desires--less who they are than who her women want them to be. Besides the humans, ever present are the horses and dogs Houston's female narrators love and the animals of the wild with whom they have virtual blood affinity. Most of these 12 stories, told with humor and honesty, are about men and women doing the Texas two-step of being "in love"--sex, the need for security, independence, and all that. However, Abby, the one-sixteenth-Cherokee horse trainer-shaman the narrator of "In My Next Life" loves but is not lovers with, causes her to ponder the "unbridgeable gap" between men and women and wonder if there might not "be more interesting things to do than fall in love." Until Houston discovers and writes about those things, many will be more than content to read her fresh approach to so many women's "weakness." ~--Marie Kuda

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

A good man is hard to find, but a good cowboy practically impossible. At least that's what the women in this accomplished, witty and engrossing debut short-story collection discover when they fall 10-gallon-hat-over-spurs for the kind of men who go in for roping cattle, not for romance. In ``Selway,'' among the most gripping of these 12 tales, an intrepid young woman rafts through treacherous white water to keep up with her boyfriend, who is as untamed as the river that nearly kills them. Accompanying Boone (``a hunter of the everything-has-to-be-hard-and-painful-to-be-good variety'') through the Alaskan wilderness during sheep hunting season, the unnamed narrator of ``Dall'' learns about male camaraderie, violence and herself. The cowboy enthusiast in the title story, listening to country music, observes, ``The men in the songs were all either brutal or inexpressive. . . . The women were victims, every one.'' But the women featured here aren't victims: they are smart, funny and likable. A gifted storyteller and a fine writer, Houston brings insight and an original perspective to the heavily trafficked gender divide. Literary Guild selection. (Jan.) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Library Journal Review

Houston, whose short stories have appeared in such periodicals as Mirabella and Mademoiselle , now has her first collection, the highlights of which are ``How To Talk to a Hunter,'' a story selected for inclusion in The Best American Short Stories, 1990 ( LJ 10/1/90), and ``Selway.'' Though these two stand out, the collection as a whole showcases a fresh, original, strong feminine voice. Houston is almost Hemingway-esque in her spare prose, yet richly eloquent in her descriptions of the Western sensibility. ``How To Talk to a Hunter'' oozes sensuality and masculinity, while at the same time getting inside the feminine mind in love with a man of few words. Likewise, ``Selway'' brilliantly shows what the experience of loving an adventurer is like. Houston is a part-time guide in Alaska. This is a strong woman who is wise and cynical but refreshingly optimistic. Her view of man-woman relationships is realistic: wise women get involved with ``cowboys'' they should know better, but they don't. Recommended.-- Rosellen Brewer, Monterey Bay Area Cooperative Lib. System, Cal. (c) Copyright 2010. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

``...I should know better, but I love it when he calls me baby.'' That about sums up the sentiment running through these fresh, highly crafted, image-packed stories by the debuting Houston. Her setting is the West, her protagonists women in their late 20s, rugged, outdoorsy, independent types looking for the love of a good man no less doggedly than are their yuppie sisters; it's only that when the guys out there disappoint--as, according to Houston, guys must--they howl instead of whine. In the collection opener, ``How to Talk to a Hunter'' (Best American Stories 1990), the down-spiraling course of a love affair between the narrator and a classic Houston male (a cowboy who's shared more intimacies with the stuffed mule deer on his wall than he ever will with a woman) trickles out amid amusing aphorisms about the ultimate incompatibility of the sexes. The theme gets replayed in ``Selway'' (from Mademoiselle), though this time in the Deliverance-like action and adventure of a maniacs-only trip down a high-water river, undertaken by the narrator in order to win the love of a professional white-water rafter. It's not until ``Cowboys Are My Weakness'' that the female voices of these stories begin to show some starch. In that story, a woman first discovers the difference between real and ersatz cowboys, then figures out that neither variety is ever going to provide ``the impossible love of a country song.'' And when ``In My Next Life'' finally rolls around, Houston delivers up a rich, sad relationship between two women, one dying of breast cancer, both locked in hopeless affairs with men, both flirting with lesbianism--``Aren't there women who...wake up ready to hold and be held by somebody who knows what it means?'' The author doesn't always search far enough for the reason why smart women behave like dishrags--but most of these stories are fine things from a writer one hopes will come up with a novel before too many suns sink in the West.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.