The Desert Rose
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
| Author | Larry McMurtry |
|---|---|
| Language | English |
| Publisher | Simon and Schuster |
Publication date | 1983 |
| Publication place | USA |
| Pages | 254 |
| Followed by | The Late Child |
The Desert Rose is a 1983 novel by Larry McMurtry about a Las Vegas showgirl.[1] It was his ninth novel. McMurtry wrote the book after visiting Las Vegas to research a film script about that city. The movie was never made.[2]
The Los Angeles Times called it "warm and funny".[3]
McMurtry always had a great deal of affection for the book saying that he suffered "a literary gloom that lasted from 1975 until 1983, when the miracle of The Desert Rose snapped me out of it."[4] He wrote the book in 21 days saying it was "a book that seemed to flow out of me as rapidly as I could type. The Desert Rose was supposed to have been a screenplay, but, to my intense relief, it came out a novel. I had hardly written a sentence I liked for eight years: to actually enjoy my own prose again was a big, big deal."[5]
McMutry reflected, "I have been interested all my life in vanishing breeds... My interest in the melancholy of those who practice dying crafts has been lifelong and is evident in many books. The Desert Rose, for example, was written at a time when there was a shift in taste in Las Vegas, away from the big-bosomed showgirls. Small-breasted dancers came to be preferred, and Harmony, my showgirl, was out of a job, like the cowboys in my other fiction."[6]
McMurtry later wrote a sequel to the book called The Late Child.