"In 12 prose portraits of people and place, western novelist and historian Bergon portrays the marriage of Old West spirit with New West realities...a way of life and culture he believes to be misunderstood and misreported... Bergon sets this record straight with close-up stories of people with whom he grew up and befriended in the San Joaquin Valley, homeland of his own Basque progenitors."
—Booklist
"... a tour of the interior West worth taking."
—Kirkus Reviews
"...insightful... Bergon's memories and interviews ground larger historical events..."
—Publishers Weekly
"With a novelist’s fine gifts for character and scene, a historian’s depth of perspective, and a local’s intimate knowledge and love, Frank Bergon leads us through California’s Big Valley, where the past lies entwined with the present and every critical tension in modern America plays out in its most distilled form."
—Miriam Horn, author of Rancher, Farmer, Fisherman: Conservation Heroes of the American Heartland
"Novelist and critic Frank Bergon paints a remarkable portrait of life in California’s Great Central Valley through his loving sketches of rural and small-town Westerners."
— Henry Louis Gates, Jr., Alphonse Fletcher University Professor, Harvard University, author of Colored People: A Memoir
"No one grasps the astonishing diversity of the American West better than Frank Bergon.... Bergon weaves a Breughel-like tapestry of today’s rural West. And he does so in prose insightful, judicious, even amusing—as crisply restrained and wryly revealing as the figures it describes. Once started, I dare you (Western style) to try to put this book down!"
—Lee Clark Mitchell, author of Late Westerns: The Persistence of a Genre
"With the perspective and compassion of a long-gone native son, Frank Bergon returns to his boyhood home in California’s San Joaquin Valley to understand the contemporary West. He introduces us to antigovernment ranchers, disappointed writers, successful physicians, and enterprising farmers..... Bergon’s beautifully drawn portraits capture a slice of the twenty-first-century West where old values are tightly held, idiosyncrasies are gently endured, and change is acknowledged, if not always embraced."
—Martha A. Sandweiss, Professor of History, Princeton University, author of Passing Strange: A Gilded Age Tale of Love and Deception Across the Color Line
"...insightful... Bergon's memories and interviews ground larger historical events..."
~Publishers Weekly
The West, with its iconic landscapes, has long served as a scenic backdrop — for photos, paintings, movies, myths and dreams. Bergon’s essays turn the focus on the West's people, and on California's enduring appeal for newcomers. His subjects share a certain tenacity and a gift for adaptation and reinvention, traits that prove just as useful for the businesspeople and high-tech ranchers of today as they were for the cowboys and Dust Bowl migrants of his youth.
~High Country News
"... a tour of the interior West worth taking."
~Kirkus Reviews
In 12 prose portraits of people and place, western novelist and historian Bergon portrays the marriage of Old West spirit with New West realities...a way of life and culture he believes to be misunderstood and misreported...Bergon sets this record straight with close-up stories of people with whom he grew up and befriended in the San Joaquin Valley, homeland of his own Basque progenitors.
~Booklist
The introduction’s pithy summary of how the mythology of the ‘Old West’ both collides with and overlaps with the realities of the ‘New West’ is compelling and rich…
~San Francisco Review of Books
With a powerful cast of characters, Two-Buck Chuck & The Marlboro Man helps readers understand the complexities of today's rural West.
~Sir Readalot
This generous-hearted book, without a whiff of cynicism, is, ultimately, a clear and quietly crafted meditation on how much has been lost of the Old West, even in the two generations since Bergon was a kid. But it also captures what of the Old West has been preserved down to this day…
~Aris Janigian, Los Angeles Review of Books
… an incisive and intriguing collection of essays that seek to illuminate the personalities that comprise the western identity.
~Western American Literature