Benediction
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- $10.99
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- $10.99
Publisher Description
Based on the true story of North America’s most unlikely cowboy, Benediction is a gritty, trenchantly observed tale of fraud and reinvention in the Old West.
In 1907, the fifteen-year-old French-Canadian Ernest Dufault left his home in Quebec for Montana, where he was promptly arrested as a cattle thief and, as a prisoner of the state of Nevada, passed himself off as an American cowboy named Will James. Over the next few decades, Dufault, a.k.a. James, would flourish as a cowboy and horsebreaker and go on to become an artist, a soldier, a Hollywood stuntman, a bestselling author of award-winning westerns — and his own false memoir. Dufault was so successful a pretender that he was later inducted into the Hall of Great Westerners, and his estranged wife, Alice Conradt, would only learn his true identity when, at the age of fifty, Will James died an alcoholic and left his estate to a man she had never heard of: one Ernest Dufault.
In Benediction, Olivier Dufault recreates the true story of his distant relative Ernest’s incarceration in a Nevada prison for rustling cattle and his subsequent reinvention of himself as “Will James.” Relying on authentic historical materials including letters, telegrams, and court documents as much as his own imagination, Olivier Dufault’s magnificent novel is a posthumous benediction of an exceptional American life in which truth and lies walk side by side.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Dufault's unremarkable debut explores the life of early-20th-century Canadian artist and cowboy Will James, born Ernest Dufault, a relative of the author. Dufault begins with Will as a teenage immigrant in the U.S., who has joined up with cowboys near the Great Basin in 1911, pretending to enjoy the taste of prairie oysters to fit in. Three years later, Will runs into fellow itinerant cowboy Lew Hackberry, who persuades him to steal some branded cattle they find loose on the prairie. Will and Lew separate, and after Will is caught by a sheriff, he cooperates in exchange for a promise of leniency, yet spends two years in a Nevada prison. There, he cultivates his talent for drawing and is sustained by letters and postcards from family. And after his release, he has a series of adventures in and around Carson City. Dufault's meandering portrait is hindered by cloying prose ("They'd felt his generosity, knew it to be intact and precious, something the prison staff had lost years ago. Will James was one of a kind"), though an afterword from Strauss evokes the "deceptively polished" charm of James's original writings, which landed him the 1927 Newbery Medal. Still, Dufault's middling effort fails to show why James merited a novel.