Leaving Cheyenne and the Comedy of Relocation
Leaving Cheyenne uses physical relocation as a metaphor for emotional hesitation. McMurtry’s characters drift across Texas, yet their romantic entanglements remain unresolved, producing gentle satire on human avoidance. The novel observes the comedic persistence of indecision and the ways relationships linger through inertia rather than passion.
Love triangles extend over years, maintained not by desire but by hesitation. McMurtry transforms indecision into a character itself, highlighting the absurdity of prolonged waiting. Humor emerges as readers witness repeated miscommunication and unrealized intentions.
The novel critiques the assumption that proximity or movement guarantees emotional resolution. Loyalty often disguises inertia, and efforts to do the right thing frequently produce comedy instead.
McMurtry allows the audience to perceive the irony in characters’ persistent avoidance without explicit commentary. The subtlety of the observation produces understated humor.
Leaving Cheyenne remains funny because it treats human reluctance as effort. Emotional clarity is deferred, patterns of misunderstanding repeat, and McMurtry’s satire emerges naturally from the dynamics of human hesitation.