I've read "Texasville" many times before. The first time I read it as a teenager, I stayed up all night to finish it and was laughing out loud and was afraid I was going to wake up everyone in the house. Since then it's always been one of my favorite go-tos when I need a pick me up.
I don't know why, but this time around it didn't seem very funny. Maybe because I'm the same age, or (gulp) older than the main characters. I was kind of surprised when I looked at other reviews for this book online how many people didn't like it at all. It's a sequel to "The Last Picture Show", so I could see how folks would be disappointed if they were expecting a story like "TLPS". "The Last Picture Show" is poignant and sad and touching. "Texasville" is the opposite: irreverent and at times nonsensical.
Duane, one of the protagonists from "TLPS", is almost 50 and thinks everyone in the small town of Thalia has gone insane. He and his wife, Karla, have four kids and they're all trouble in their own ways. Dickie, who's twenty-one, sells drugs and is having affairs with at least two married women twice his age. Nellie, who's nineteen, has been married and divorced three times and has two kids. The twins, Jack and Julie, get kicked out of camp for various horrible things. Everyone in town is switching marital partners seemingly at random. Duane became very rich during the 70s, but now in the mid-eighties the price of oil has dropped and he's facing bankruptcy. On top of all that, the county is nearing its Centennial, and Duane is in charge of the thing. He spends a lot of time in his hot tub, shooting his gun at a two story doghouse he bought for his dog, who won't go near it. He's sad and miserable all the time and his wife and ex-girlfriend, Jacy, have become besties and constantly pick on him.
I kind of felt for Duane. Everyone's behavior was appalling. No wonder he was so upset all the time. Everyone in town seemed to think his kids were charming and lively but I thought they were horrid little brats. Oh well. Hopefully in another decade or so when I reread it, it'll be funny again.