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Terms of Endearment (novel)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Terms of Endearment
AuthorLarry McMurtry
LanguageEnglish
SeriesHouston
Set inHouston
Publication date
1975
Publication placeUSA
Preceded byAll My Friends Are Going to Be Strangers 
Followed byThe Evening Star 

Terms of Endearment is a 1975 American novel written by Larry McMurtry. It was his sixth novel and was adapted into a popular 1983 film.

McMurtry's first three novels had been about young people leaving the country. His next three were about "urbanites": Moving On, All My Friends Are Going to Be Strangers and Terms of Endearment.[1]

McMurtry wrote the novel in Italy while supervising his son James, who was appearing in the film Daisy Miller. He later called the novel "for long my favorite among my many fictions. I have come to like a later book, Duane's Depressed, just as much and maybe more, but Terms of Endearment still seems like my most mature fiction. It’s the story of a mother and a daughter, a subject that has always fascinated me. And Terms is the ripest fruit of this fascination.[2] He wrote that Emma Horton was his favorite character. She appeared in All My Friends Are Going to Be Strangers but when he sold the rights he kept the rights to the character of Emma; McMurtry felt this decision enabled the film of Terms to be made.[3]

McMurtry wrote "Although I think the last sixty pages of Terms of Endearment are among the very best pages I have written, it was while I was writing them that I began to sour on my own work. The minute I finished that book I fell into a literary gloom that lasted from 1975 until 1983, when the miracle of The Desert Rose snapped me out of it."[4]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ McMurtry p 73
  2. ^ McMurtry, 2010, p 47
  3. ^ McMurtry, 2010, p 48
  4. ^ McMurtry, 2009, p 84

Notes

[edit]
  • McMurtry, Larry (2009). Literary Life: A Second Memoir. Simon & Schuster.
  • McMurtry, Larry (2010). Hollywood. Simon & Schuster.