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Buffalo Girls by Larry McMurtry is a fictional novel on the life of two women, one of which is an outstanding Martha Jane Canary, also known as Calamity, who was a star of the Wild West Shows; and Dora DuFran, a frontier woman. In fact, it is a dramatic story of how mountain men, buffalo girls, Indians, and cowboys had lived and built the Wild West until it fell in oblivion by 1887. The story told by McMurtry is striking enough in different episodes both funny and sad. It is a book full of genuine American spirit evident during the period after the Civil War.
On the other hand, it has a great deal of Calamity’s trip to London with her friends with the purpose of setting performance before the queen Victoria. The process of aging is well illustrated throughout the novel showing some episodes of sadness due to the fact that the main characters’ time has passed and their moment of glory as well. It is a manifestation of Calamity’s ideas on the Wild West addressed to her daughter Jane (McMurtry 9). With all her brevity and active participation in hand, Calamity highlights her fading away in this life as the time has come to step back in her careers and living at the most favorite site, meaning the Wild West.
She confesses that “the light is fading” and that she does not have “much of a fire” (McMurtry 10). In this vein, the whole story is a justification of Calamity’s life and her adventures during a span of time called life. Works Cited McMurtry, Larry. Buffalo Girls : A Novel. New York, NY: Simon & Schuster, 2001.
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