So Brave, Young, and Handsome: A Novel

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So Brave, Young, and Handsome: A Novel Page 1

by Leif Enger




  Praise for So Brave, Young, and Handsome:

  “So Brave, Young, and Handsome is a sharp and brainy redemption tale, with all the twists and turns and thrills of a dime-store Western. . . . [Enger’s] laid claim to a musical, sometimes magical and deeply satisfying kind of storytelling.”

  —Veronique de Turenne, Los Angeles Times

  “An old-fashioned, swashbuckling, heroic Western, with pistols and ponies and senoritas and sharpshooters—an adventure of the heart and mind.”

  —Carrie Brown, The Washington Post Book World

  “With its brisk, short chapters and heady, nostalgic air, Enger’s delightful follow-up to Peace Like a River is a bighearted Western yarn, full of blossoming and reformed outlaws, wide prairies and aromatic orange groves, perilous chases and abductions, trouble and redemption. It’s an old-fashioned road trip you can’t afford to miss. . . . Enger’s tale is lively and generous of spirit, its stately prose steeped in warm, turn-of-the-century charm, and Monte’s discovery of his loyalty and limits is engaging. At a time when good westerns are hard to find, So Brave, Young, and Handsome deserves to become a classic.”

  —Connie Ogle, The Miami Herald

  “So Brave, Young, and Handsome is an enthralling romp, appealing to fans of Peace Like a River—to anyone, that is, who loves a good story.”

  —Mindy Friddle, The Charlotte Observer

  “A superbly written, utterly compelling story of self-discovery and redemption disguised as a cracking good adventure tale . . . Enger has created a work of great humanity and huge heart, a riveting piece of fiction that while highly accessible is never shallow. This story of an ordinary man’s discovery of who he is and his place in the world is exciting, admirable, and ultimately very affecting. . . . After reading the final page, don’t be surprised if you find yourself shaking your head and murmuring, ‘Wow. What a good book.’”

  —Peter Moore, Star Tribune (Minneapolis)

  “[Leif Enger is] a formidably gifted writer, one whose fictions are steeped in the American grain. . . . [He] is—like Ron Hansen—a child-friendly, contemporary American heartland novelist, a writer unafraid to concoct and couch his stories in such terms as faith, miracle, sin and grace, repentance and redemption, atonement and absolution. . . . Enger is a masterful storyteller . . . possessed of a seemingly effortless facility for the stiletto-sharp drawing of wholly believable characters [and] a pitch-perfect ear for the cadences and syntax of Midwest and Great Plains vernacular. His Amishly carpentered prose smacks of plow work, prairie, flapjacks and cider, butter churns, denim and calico. . . . At times reminiscent of the sinew and gristle in the craggier work of Annie Proulx, and at other times aspiring to a Jean Shepherdesque folk poetry . . . So Brave, Young, and Handsome is affable and human as all get out, homespun and sophisticated at once, wise and knowing about the ubiquity of the human condition and the vagaries of the human heart.”

  —Bruce Olds, Chicago Tribune

  “A remarkable story told like the old-style Western novels. . . . [So Brave, Young, and Handsome] is an amazing adventure story, full of wonderful characters and a great plot.”

  —Vicki Rock, Somerset County Daily American

  “If you want a picaresque tale similar in flavor to The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn or O Brother, Where Art Thou? read Leif Enger’s new book So Brave, Young, and Handsome. . . . Complete with reversals of fortune, shootouts, and colorfully drawn characters, this Western yarn is a fun ride and yet poignant too.”

  —Elissa Elliott, Christianity Today

  “Leif Enger has done it again. He has a magic touch with a high-action road novel, and the road in So Brave, Young, and Handsome leads straight into the wild heart of the American West. So Brave, Young, and Handsome abounds with adventure, comradeship, and hardship, splendid characters, romance, humor, and goodnaturedness. It is a literary Western in all the best senses—and a world of fun to read.”

  —Howard Frank Mosher

  “So Brave, Young, and Handsome is an almost perfect novel, lively and engrossing, full of surprises, funny, touching, and a great read. . . . [This novel] will appeal to fans of Larry McMurty’s Western epics, but also to those who enjoy the magical realism of Isabel Allende and Alice Hoffman. The straightforward narrative, recounted in a single voice, keeps us turning the pages, faster and faster, and by the time the story comes full circle, Enger will have plenty of new fans hoping he gets to work soon on his next book.”

  —Gail Pennington, St. Louis Post-Dispatch

  “So Brave, Young, and Handsome is a fine novel, beautifully done, a serious Western story worthy of comparison with Shane and Monte Walsh and True Grit.”

  —Bryan Woolley, The Dallas Morning News

  “[An] expansive saga of redemption in the early twentieth-century West . . . An adventure story [that is] so rich you can smell the spilled whiskey and feel the grit.”

  —Publishers Weekly

  “[Leif Enger is in] fine storytelling form, as he spins a picaresque tale of redemption and renewal amid the fading glories of the Old West.”

  —Kirkus Reviews (starred review)

  “Ernest Hemingway famously remarked that ‘All modern American literature comes from one book by Mark Twain called The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn,’ and while such a broad declaration might be worthy of challenge, it nonetheless struck me as apt while I was reading Leif Enger’s entertaining second novel. . . . Like The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn, Enger’s So Brave, Young, and Handsome involves a quintessentially American journey. . . . Enger delivers a rip-roaring follow-up.”

  —Robert Weibezahl, BookPage

  SO BRAVE, YOUNG, AND HANDSOME

  Also by Leif Enger

  Peace Like a River

  SO BRAVE, YOUNG, AND HANDSOME

  LEIF ENGER

  Copyright © 2008 by Leif Enger

  All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced in any form or by any electronic or mechanical means, or the facilitation thereof, including information storage and retrieval systems, without permission in writing from the publisher, except by a reviewer, who may quote brief passages in a review. Any members of educational institutions wishing to photocopy part or all of the work for classroom use, or publishers who would like to obtain permission to include the work in an anthology, should send their inquiries to Grove/Atlantic, Inc., 841 Broadway, New York, NY 10003.

  Published simultaneously in Canada

  Printed in the United States of America

  eBook ISBN-13: 978-1-5558-4849-1

  Atlantic Monthly Press

  an imprint of Grove/Atlantic. Inc.

  841 Broadway

  New York, NY 10003

  Distributed by Publishers Group West

  www.groveatlantic.com

  For Robin, Ty, and John the brightest colors I ever saw

  “The Cowboy’s Lament”

  We Beat the drum slowly and played the fife lowly

  And bitterly wept as we bore him along

  For we all loved our comrade, so brave, young, and handsome

  We all loved our comrade, although he’d done wrong

  SO BRAVE, YOUNG, AND HANDSOME

  A Thousand a Day

  1

  Not to disappoint you, but my troubles are nothing—not for an author, at least. Common blots aside, I have none of the usual Big Artillery: I am not penniless, brilliant, or an orphan; have never been to war, suffered starvation or lashed myself to a mast. My health is adequate, my wife steadfast, my son decent and promising. I am not surrounded by people who don’t understand me! In fact most understand me straightaway, for I am and always was an amiable fellow and reliably polite. You, a curious stranger, c
ould walk in this moment; I would offer you coffee and set you at ease. Would we talk pleasantly? Indeed we would, though you’d soon be bored—here on Page One I don’t even live in interesting surroundings, such as in a hospital for the insane, or on a tramp steamer, or in Madrid. Later in the proceedings I do promise a tense chase or two and the tang of gunpowder, but here at the outset it’s flat old Minnesota and I am sitting on the porch of my comfortable farmhouse, composing the flaccid middle of my seventh novel in five years.

  Seven novels, you exclaim—quite right, but then I didn’t finish any of them. I’m grateful for that, and you should be too. Number Seven featured a handsome but increasingly bilious ranch hand named Dan Roscoe. A right enough pard to begin with, he became more arrogant page by page. No laconic wit for Dan! It was himself I was writing about, with many low sighs, the morning I first saw Glendon Hale rowing upstream through the ropy mists of the Cannon River. What a cool spring morning that was—birdsong, dew on the blossoms—I yearned to be on the river myself, but Dan Roscoe had rustlers to catch and a girl to win. Neither seemed likely. How often I sighed in those days! I needed a revelation but you know how it is. I would have settled for a nice surprise.

  Hearing the groan of oarlocks I peered downriver. A white-headed fellow was rowing up out of the haze.

  He rowed standing, facing forward, a tottery business; twice as I watched, one of his narrow sweeps missed the water completely and he lurched like old Quixote, hooting to himself. The truth is he appeared a bit elevated, early though it was. As I say, he was white-haired with a white mustache and he wore white shirtsleeves and his boat too was white above the waterline, so that he had a spectral or angelic quality only somewhat reduced by his tipsy aspect.

  Forth he came through the parting mists. To this day I don’t know what took hold of me as he approached. I stood from my work and called hello.

  “Hello back,” said he, not pausing in his strokes.

  “Pretty vessel,” I called.

  “Pretty river,” he said, a simple reply that made me ache to be afloat. But he wasn’t slowing, as you might expect a polite person to do, and I stepped off the porch and jogged down to the stubby dock my son had built for fishing.

  “Can you stop a minute? There’s coffee,” I said—sounding pushy, I suspect, though I am no extrovert; ask Susannah.

  “Maybe,” he said, yet he was already well past me and in fact the haze was closing round him again. I had a last glimpse of his boat—its graceful sheer and backswept transom. Then it disappeared, though I could hear in the fog the dip of the old man’s oars, his screeling oarlocks, and what might have been a laugh of delight, as though he’d vanished by some mystic capacity that tickled him every time.

  I went heavily back to the porch. My boy Redstart was there grinning—he was eleven, Redstart, catching up with his papa in all kinds of ways.

  “Who was that man?” he inquired.

  “I don’t know.”

  “Was he drunk, do you think?”

  “Anything’s possible.”

  “He rows standing up,” said Redstart. “I never saw that before. Did you talk to him?”

  “No, I didn’t.” I couldn’t look at the boy for a moment or two. I was embarrassed at how much I’d wanted to visit with the man in the boat, and how unaccountably sorry I was that he’d just rowed away. I sat in my chair and lifted pages into my lap. Dan Roscoe was waiting for me in those pages—boy, he was morose. Who could face it?

  “I can still hear him,” Redstart said, “out in the mist. Can you hear him rowing, Papa?”

  I looked at my son, the lover of mysteries. You could never guess what Redstart might say, for his mind was made of stories; he’d gathered all manner of splendid facts about gunpowder and deserts of the world and the anchoring of lighthouses against the furious sea; he knew which members of the James gang had once ridden into our town to knock over a bank and been shot to moist rags for their trouble; and about me he knew some things not even his mother knew, such as the exact number of novels I had abandoned on that porch. He whispered, “How many words today, Papa?”

  I made a quick and not altogether honest guess. “Two hundred or so.”

  “It’s early still, that’s pretty good,” he replied, then sat and shut his eyes and leaned awhile. I knew he should go take the horses to pasture or mulch the tomatoes but I didn’t want to lose his company. I picked up my pen and wrote: As Dan Roscoe branded each bawling calf with the Moon Ranch insignia, he recalled how Belle had clung to the arm of his hated rival—a moribund sentence that announced the death of my seventh novel. It didn’t surprise me. I had the grim yet satisfactory thought that it wouldn’t surprise Dan Roscoe, either. Well, let him moan! I was sick of Dan and his myriad problems.

  “Red,” said I, “here’s an idea. Why don’t you go in the house and lay hands on a few of your mother’s orange rolls. Let’s climb in the boat and head upstream.”

  “Hmm,” said Redstart. He dawdled to his feet; he said “Well” a couple of times.

  “Well, nothing,” I said. “We don’t even need the rolls. Let’s catch up with that old man. I want to talk to him.”

  Redstart went to the door. Poor reluctant boy; long my joyous accomplice in distraction, he had lately been run to ground by his efficient and lovely and desperate mother. He didn’t want to shame me, but what choice did I give him?

  “I guess we better not, Papa. You got to get your work done. Remember what Mama said?”

  2

  What Susannah said was, approximately, If you don’t soon finish that book of yours, we’ll have to start selling the furniture. Lest you read in her words a tone of panic, let me assure you there was none. She was only letting me know where things stood. The end of money didn’t mean the end of much—the end of our marriage, say, or even of Susannah’s obstinate confidence in me. At worst it meant the end of pretense. The end of my little run at distinction. To say it truly: the end of pride.

  I was the one who panicked.

  Here’s how I came to this sorry pass. In the fall of 1910 I published a short novel called Martin Bligh, which became so popular I quit being a postman and started calling myself an author. Who knows how these things happen? The book was just an adventure tale. Nothing ambitious. I only wrote it for entertainment and to gratify a sort of wistful ache—Martin Bligh was a postman too, though as a Pony Express rider he had a better shot at glory and peril than I in my tinctured cell at the Northfield P.O. It was a story to make a boy lean forward; it had Indians and great ships and the buried gold of Coronado and two separate duels, including one with sabers. I also added a black-haired senõrita because my own Susannah loves a romance, yet Bligh was reviewed in a Chicago newspaper as “disturbingly real,” no doubt because some of the Indians adorned their pintos with bloody blond scalps. That the haggard and venerated Buffalo Bill Cody read my story and praised it in newspaper interviews did not hurt the book at all, though it hardly explains why the first printing of three thousand copies disappeared in two weeks. My publisher, Hackle & Banks, New York, was startled enough to wire me congratulations and print another four thousand, which sped from the warehouse in exactly twelve days. At this I received a second telegram: BLIGH OUR FASTEST SELLER. THANK YOU. GRACE. I was ignorant at the time that Grace was Grace Hackle, the generous and canny widow of Dixon Hackle, who had founded the publishing firm twenty years before.

  Then letters began to arrive. I was still employed at the P.O. and was startled in the sorting room when envelopes bearing my name began crossing the desk. I rarely received mail—when I did it was apt to be from my mother, whose letters were straightforward offerings of gained wisdom. These on the other hand were praise from strangers who had read my little tale. To call these readers charitable doesn’t touch it. They were lavish and interpretive; they were “stirred.” The daunting and completely unforeseen fact was this: They had mistaken me for a person of substance! I blushed but kept the letters. When I did hear from my mother, sometime lat
er, she suggested I cling to my place at the post office and not let publication make me biggity. Fine advice, you will agree, yet vanity is a devious monkey. While some labeled my story naïve or my diction purple, I clove to a review calling it “an enchanting and violent yarn spun in the brave hues of history.” A famous ladies’ journal claimed I’d crafted “the ideal popular tale.” By the time Mama wrote I was miles past her advice. By then Grace Hackle had sent me several elegant personal notes. She had paid for Susannah and me to ride the Great Northern from St. Paul to New York City, where she registered us in a hotel with frescoes and high ceilings. She had accompanied us to a stage play, then to a restaurant lighted the amber of sunsets, where we ate fresh sea bass and talked of books and authors.

  “It is destined timing,” Grace declared. “You have dared paint a romance on the sterile canvas of our age.” She was a perfectly beautiful tidy small woman with the metropolitan habit of placing events in the big picture. She believed romance was no mere ingredient but the very stone floor on which all life makes its fretful dance. Having traveled once as far west as the Black Hills she still awoke from dreams of rock and prairie. She confessed to a fascination with the architecture of tepees. William Howard Taft might be president, Grace noted, but who did not miss Teddy Roosevelt? “The strenuous life,” she sighed.

  Looking back, I have to laugh. You know why Martin Bligh was strenuous? Whenever I didn’t know what to write next, I put a swift river in front of his horse and sent the two of them across!

  “And now,” Grace added, “tell me you plan to write another book.”

  I looked at Susannah, who was squeezing my hand under the table. I had never thought about another book.

  Grace sipped tea. “You have some ideas, I suppose.”

  “Why, yes,” I said, though my lone idea at the moment was the fragile sweetheart Grace herself had just planted: that I was an Author now, that I had new Business upon the Earth, that the tedium of sorting mail might be exchanged for something more expansive or—dare I say it?—Swashbuckling.

 

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