No cover

Charles Portis: True grit (1981, Chivers)

262 pages

English language

Published Nov. 14, 1981 by Chivers.

ISBN:
978-0-85119-131-7
Copied ISBN!

View on OpenLibrary

5 stars (1 review)

True Grit is Charles Portis' most famous novel--first published in 1968. It tells the story of Mattie Ross, who is just fourteen years of age when a coward going by the name of Tom Chaney shoots her father down in Fort Smith, Arkansas, and robs him of his life, his horse, and $150 in cash money. Mattie leaves home to avenge her father's blood. With the one-eyed Rooster Cogburn, the meanest available U.S. Marshal, by her side, Mattie pursues the homicide into Indian Territory.

True Grit is eccentric, cool, straight, and unflinching, like Mattie herself. From a writer of true cult status, this is an American classic through and through.

19 editions

Great book: concise, funny, dark and dirty

5 stars

What a book, really. We get told the story of how a fourteen year old daughter sees the revenging dead of the killer of her father through, by contracting a US marshal and riding with him into Native territory. The story is told in her voice, with some southern dialect and some 19th century dialect, bringing her Old testament justice, her upraising, her intelligence and stuborness to funny, breathtaking life.

The marshal she obliges to catch or kill the killer is drunken Rooster Cogburn, a survivor of the Civil War who rode with a young Jesse James.

The plot mostly shows us Mattie Ross, Cogburn and the other marshal that rides with them, LaBoeuf. We only shortly meet Tom Chaney, the killer, or Lucky Ned the gang leader he rides with. It takes some wrangling for Mattie to get Cogburn to lift his arse, then to have Cogburn and LaBoeuf …