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Wallace Stegner (left) and Edward Abbey (right) both made names for themselves as they moved west. Author David Gessner followed their path and gained new insights on the men.
Wallace Stegner (left) and Edward Abbey (right) both made names for themselves as they moved west. Author David Gessner followed their path and gained new insights on the men. (Alex Gotfryd/Corbis; John Blaustein)

New Reads: Following Two Iconic Authors of the West

A fresh look at Wallace Stegner and Edward Abbey, plus this month's best novel-soundtrack combo

Published: 
Wallace Stegner (left) and Edward Abbey (right) both made names for themselves as they moved west. Author David Gessner followed their path and gained new insights on the men.
(Photo: Alex Gotfryd/Corbis; John Blaustein)

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Released in April, David Gessner鈥檚 ($27, W. W. Norton) is a biography of two of the West鈥檚 most iconic authors. At least, it鈥檚 primarily biography; it鈥檚 also a travelogue in which Gessner, a thoughtful and irreverent essayist, traces the two men鈥檚 lives as they headed west across the country.

He begins in the east, visiting Vermont, the setting of Stegner鈥檚 last novel, , and Home, Pennsylvania, where Abbey was raised 鈥渨ithout flush toilets, with a gun sometimes in hand, and with an intimacy with animals both wild and tame.鈥 In the early going, much of what Gessner learns fits in with what we already think: Stegner the restrained writer and Stanford professor; Abbey the wild man of conservation with a running FBI file.

But those conceptions begin to change as Gessner makes his way west and discovers that Stegner, who lobbied to pass the Wilderness Act and save Dinosaur National Monument from flooding, was more radical than many believe. 鈥淗aving witnessed the failure of a thousand rugged individualists, his father among them,鈥 writes Gessner, 鈥渉e came to believe in community,鈥 predating the counterculture鈥檚 adoption of the idea in the 1960s. By contrast, Gessner begins to think that Abbey, 鈥渇or all his own forays into monkeywrenching and protest,鈥 wasn鈥檛 always radical so much as selfish. 鈥淪ome of Abbey鈥檚 bad personal behavior was brave. But some was simply bad.鈥

These revelations, and Gessner鈥檚 subtle humor, make for an absorbing read. Abbey鈥檚 and Stegner鈥檚 lives, Gessner says, 鈥渁re creative possibilities for living a life both good and wild.鈥 That鈥檚 something many in the West still seek鈥攁nd what makes this book such a great read for anyone living there.

A Book That Comes with Its Own Music

The book: Christian Kiefer鈥檚 ($26, Liveright) follows former criminal Bill, who lives a peaceful life managing a wildlife sanctuary in Idaho, until he鈥檚 confronted by his past.

The soundtrack: , an LP and expanded download of ghostly Americana produced by Kiefer鈥攁 talented musician who has played with Califone and Bill Callahan鈥攖o accompany the book. $20.

From 国产吃瓜黑料 Magazine, Apr 2014 Lead Photo: Alex Gotfryd/Corbis; John Blaustein

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