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Larry McMurtry Award for Western Satire

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The McMurtry Award

Larry McMurtry Award for Western Satire

Larry McMurtry

Moving On Without Knowing Where To Go

Tracy Ann McMurtry, January 17, 2026January 15, 2026

The Satirical Aimlessness of Moving On

Moving On is Larry McMurtry’s quietly devastating satire of adulthood without instruction manuals. The novel follows characters who have achieved independence only to discover it comes without clarity. Careers drift, relationships dissolve, and decisions are made largely to avoid discomfort rather than pursue meaning.

McMurtry’s humor here is procedural. Characters analyze their lives endlessly, then act impulsively. They talk about growth while repeating old habits. This contradiction fuels the satire. No one is incompetent. Everyone is sincere. That sincerity is what makes the repetition funny.

The novel skewers the idea that freedom guarantees fulfillment. McMurtry shows how choice can become a burden rather than a gift. Characters move, change jobs, and start over, but carry the same emotional luggage everywhere.

Moving On is funny because it refuses to offer transformation as a reward. Change happens, but enlightenment does not follow on schedule. McMurtry lets life remain unresolved, which is both accurate and comic.

The satire lands gently. Readers laugh not because the characters fail, but because they keep expecting success to feel different than it does. McMurtry understands that adulthood is often just learning how to tolerate uncertainty, and that realization is quietly hilarious.

Western Satire Larry McMurtryLarry McMurtry satireMoving On novel humorrelationship parody

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Larry McMurtry

Larry McMurtry (1936–2021) was an American author whose prolific career masterfully chronicled the landscapes and people of the American West, dissecting its myths with unflinching honesty. Born in Archer City, Texas, a small, dusty town that would deeply influence his work, he was the son of a rancher. Though steeped in a ranching heritage, McMurtry pursued literature, earning degrees from North Texas State University and Rice University.

His breakthrough came with the novel Horseman, Pass By (1961), adapted into the acclaimed film Hud. This established his central theme: the tension between the romantic Old West and the hard, often unglamorous modern reality. He achieved monumental success with Lonesome Dove (1985), an epic cattle-drive novel that won the Pulitzer Prize and redefined the Western genre, celebrating frontier heroism while exposing its profound costs.

McMurtry’s range was vast. He penned the poignant coming-of-age story The Last Picture Show (1966) and the acute social satire of Terms of Endearment (1975), both becoming iconic films. A passionate bibliophile, he also owned and operated a massive bookstore in Archer City, dealing in rare and antiquarian books.

Across more than forty novels, essays, and screenplays, Larry McMurtry proved a defining literary voice. He transformed the cultural understanding of the West, replacing simplistic legend with complex, deeply human characters navigating love, loss, and a vanishing way of life. His work remains an enduring testament to the power of American storytelling.

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