"Greatest" American story teller

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Fat Dad

Trad climber
Los Angeles, CA
Sep 25, 2018 - 07:13pm PT
So we're talking story tellers, not writers. So someone like Faulkner or Joyce, who are artists, sometimes subordinate the story to their craft. Jack London is a great suggestion. Raymond Chandler; I was also thinking Flannery O'Connor. I would toss Flaubert in the mix as well; Tolstoy too.
Batrock

Trad climber
Burbank
Sep 25, 2018 - 07:20pm PT
Joaquin Miller was a contemporary of Twains but was more California centric. He is an amazing story teller and spinner of tall tails both fiction and non fiction.
zBrown

Ice climber
Sep 25, 2018 - 07:34pm PT
Well he was a naturalized "American", but far and away, don Carlos Castaneda. Listened to him for many hours. He could write too.


Fat Dad

Trad climber
Los Angeles, CA
Sep 25, 2018 - 08:03pm PT
I'm going to amend my answer: Chekhov.
john hansen

climber
Sep 25, 2018 - 08:47pm PT
I would throw James Michener into the mix. It was always easy to pick up the next chapter.

I will have to check out some of these other writers.
Reilly

Mountain climber
The Other Monrovia- CA
Sep 25, 2018 - 08:59pm PT
Czekhov was American? 😳
zBrown

Ice climber
Sep 25, 2018 - 09:10pm PT
Edgar Allen Poe gets only an honorable mention?

Stephen King?




Marlow

Sport climber
OSLO
Sep 26, 2018 - 05:02am PT

He got his blankets and spread them in the hay and he was sitting eating sardines out of a tin and watching the rain when a yellow dog rounded the side of the building and entered through the open door and stopped. It looked first at the horse. Then it swung its head and looked at him. It was an old dog gone gray about the muzzle and it was horribly crippled in its hindquarters and its head was askew someway on its body and it moved grotesquely. An arthritic and illjoined thing that crabbed sideways and sniffed at the floor to pick up the man’s scent and then raised its head and nudged the air with its nose and tried to sort him from the shadows with its milky half blind eyes.
Billy set the sardines carefully beside him. He could smell the thing in the damp. It stood there inside the door with the rain falling in the weeds and gravel behind it and it was wet and wretched and so scarred and broken that it might have been patched up out of parts of dogs by demented vivisectionists. It stood and then it shook itself in its grotesque fashion and hobbled moaning to the far corner of the room where it looked back and then turned three times and lay down.
He wiped the blade of the knife on his breeches leg and laid the knife across the tin and looked about. He pried a loose clod of mud from the wall and threw it. The dog made a strange moaning sound but it did not move.

Git, he shouted.
The dog moaned, it lay as before.
He swore softly and rose to his feet and cast about for a weapon. The horse looked at him and it looked at the dog. He crossed the room and went out in the rain and walked around the side of the building. When he came back he had in his fist a threefoot length of waterpipe and with it he advanced upon the dog. Go on, he shouted. Git.
The dog rose moaning and slouched away down the wall and limped out into the yard. When he turned to go back to his blankets it slank past him into the building again. He turned and ran at it with the pipe and it scrabbled away.
He followed it. Outside it had stopped at the edge of the road and it stood in the rain looking back. It had perhaps once been a hunting dog, perhaps left for dead in the mountains or by some highwayside. Repository of ten thousand indignities and the harbringer of God knew what. He bent and clawed up a handful of smallrocks from the gravel apron and slung them. The dog raised its misshapen head and howled weirdly. He advanced upon it and it set off up the road. He ran after it and threw more rocks and shouted at it and he slung the length of pipe. It went clanging and skittering up the road behind the dog and the dog howled again and began to run, hobbling brokenly on its twisted legs with the strange head agoggle on its neck. As it went it raised its mouth sideways and howled again with a terrible sound. Something not of this earth. As if some awful composite of grief had broke through from the preterite world. It tottered away up the road in the rain on its stricken legs and as it went it howled again and again in its heart’s despair until it was gone from sight and all sound in the night’s onset.

He woke in the white light of the desert noon and sat up in the ranksmelling blankets. The shadow of the bare wood windowsash stenciled onto the opposite wall began to pale and fade as he watched. As if a cloud were passing over the sun. He kicked out of the blankets and pulled on his boots and his hat and rose and walked out. The road was a pale gray in the light and the light was drawing away along the edges of the world. Small birds had wakened in the roadside desert bracken and begun to chitter and to flit about and out on the blacktop bands of tarantulas that had been crossing the road in the dark like landcrabs stood frozen at their articulations, arch as marionettes, testing with their measured octave tread the sudden jointed shadows of themselves beneath them.
He looked out down the road and he looked toward the fading light. Darkening shapes of cloud all along the northern rim. It had ceased raining in the night and a broken rainbow or watergall stood out on the desert in a dim neon bow and he looked again at the road which lay as before yet more dark and darkening still where it ran on to the east and where there was no sun and there was no dawn and when he looked again toward the north the light was drawing away faster and that noon in which he’d woke was now become an alien dusk and now an alien dark and the birds that flew had lighted and all had hushed once again in the bracken by the road.
He walked out. A cold wind was coming down off the mountains. It was shearing off the western slopes of the continent where the summer snow lay above the timberline and it was crossing through the high fir forests and among the poles of the aspens and it was sweeping over the desert plain below. It had ceased raining in the night and he walked out on the road and called for the dog. He called and called. Standing in that inexplicable darkness. Where there was no sound anywhere save only the wind. After a while he sat in the road. He took off his hat and placed it on the tarmac before him and he bowed his head and held his face in his hands and wept. He sat there for a long time and after a while the east did gray and after a while the right and godmade sun did rise, once again, for all and without distinction.
Nick Danger

Ice climber
Arvada, CO
Sep 26, 2018 - 07:06am PT
Story tellers I very much enjoy include
Dave Roberts
Mark Twain
John Long (I'm looking at you, Largo)
Ed Hertfelder (motorcycle specific and a few decades old, but what a story teller!)
Peter Egan (for anyone whole loves motorcycles, cars, the Blues, and guitars - fabulous story teller)

Nice thread, Largo - thanks.
-ND
10b4me

Social climber
Lida Junction
Sep 26, 2018 - 08:00am PT
Is there a difference between a "writer" and a "storyteller"?

as someone said upthread, a story can be told thru song, but it takes someone to write that song.
Gary

Social climber
Desolation Basin, Calif.
Sep 26, 2018 - 08:59am PT
Not a writer, but Utah Phillis was a good story teller.
Fat Dad

Trad climber
Los Angeles, CA
Sep 26, 2018 - 12:38pm PT
Czekhov was American? 😳
Oops. Kind of a "duh" moment there. I guess I can also delete Tolstoy and Flaubert from my earlier response.

I should chime in for Hemingway too. I reread
The Sun Also Rises
not long ago just for his description of a fishing trip. Don't really care for fishing that much, but dang did he make me want to start.
Toker Villain

Big Wall climber
Toquerville, Utah
Sep 26, 2018 - 12:52pm PT
James D. Hornfischer

I will never again place Last Stand Of The Tin Can Sailors on my nightstand.



It has cost me too much sleep.
(and what is more American a story than the greatest naval victory of all time?)
ydpl8s

Trad climber
Santa Monica, California
Sep 26, 2018 - 01:27pm PT
Gary, is that Utah Phillips that you are talking about? He had a duo with Mike McGuffy, who was a friend of mine when I lived in Denver.
zBrown

Ice climber
Sep 26, 2018 - 02:08pm PT
I drove Bruce from UCI to McCabes. He did all the talking. We didn't stop for pie!


I just looked it up, he was only 11 years older than me.


https://blogs.lib.unc.edu/sfc/wp-content/uploads/2015/06/McCabes_8.jpg



More than 1,600 musical acts have played at McCabe’s Guitar Shop in Santa Monica, California, over the last 45 years. The list on the store’s website even comes with a warning: “We lost track of a few names.”

Now Bob Riskin, the concert venue’s owner, has donated thousands of hours of recordings from those concerts to the Southern Folklife Collection (SFC) in the Wilson Special Collections Library. The SFC will preserve the recordings by creating and archiving digital copies of them.
Nick Danger

Ice climber
Arvada, CO
Sep 26, 2018 - 03:02pm PT
Toker, you got that right with James Hornfischer. I really like all of his naval histories, but Neptunes Inferno is just fantastic.
Gary

Social climber
Desolation Basin, Calif.
Sep 26, 2018 - 03:04pm PT
Gary, is that Utah Phillips that you are talking about?

Oopsie, my bad. It is.

jt newgard

Trad climber
San Diego, CA
Sep 26, 2018 - 05:08pm PT
Ken Burns...good call. Caught some of the Vietnam War series put out recently and a few episodes really hit hard (Ep.6-7 covering 1968-69 especially, how much awful stuff happened in that time period is insane).

I haven't seen anyone else mention Herman Melville yet. One could argue Moby Dick is like a collection of short stories as the chapters are all quite short. The preacher's sermon, Ishmael bunking up with Queequeg, poor Pip adrift in the ocean, Stubb getting kicked by Ahab's ivory leg (my favorite chapter), the awesomeness goes on. And you can't deny the career value of knowing every aspect of whaling by the time you're done reading it!!

To continue the nautical theme, Alfred Lansing did a phenomenal job with the Endurance story. Loads of primary source material finely crafted in an understated way, where most writers would probably go straight to gaudy hyperbole especially considering the epic-ness of the survival tale.

And...F Scott Fitzgerald's last page in The Great Gatsby is, on its own, far greater than anything Hemingway ever wrote! BOOM!!
clinker

Trad climber
Santa Cruz, California
Sep 26, 2018 - 05:33pm PT
Jt newgard's sign off of "BOOM" reminds me of my days perusing Marvel and DC comics.

Do comics qualify to be in this topic? The stories and characters certainly hit the jackpot in sales in their retelling.
Gary

Social climber
Desolation Basin, Calif.
Sep 26, 2018 - 07:58pm PT
zBrown, that must have been quite a ride.
[Click to View YouTube Video]
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