The Monkey Wrench Gang by Edward Abbey
352 pages
Published 1975
Read from May 28 to May 31
Rating: ★★★½ out of 5
I
prevaricated longer than strictly necessary in adjudging a rating for
this book. My ratings, after all, are almost entirely arbitrary; in the
end, who cares? For The Monkey Wrench Gang, the rating came down
to a debate between the part of me that likes ecoterrorism and the
slickrock Southwest, which wanted to rate it quite highly, and the part
of me that hates certain conventions of 1970s popular fiction, which
wanted to mark it down somewhat.
My least favorite aspect of the
book was Bonnie. The 1970s were an awkward time in the evolution of how
women are depicted in mainstream fiction, and Bonnie fits the slot of
the 1970s New Woman stereotype: contumacious yet concupiscent, "bitchy"
one might say, motivated by a vague rage at the very concept of maleness
yet possessed of a driving desire to nest, popping the pill religiously
yet evaluating every man in her circle as a potential father for her
inevitable offspring. Bonnie receives no characterization beyond that
period-specific archetype, aside from purely cosmetic flourishes (of
Bronx Jewish extraction, thinks of her companions once and only once as goyim
because why the hell not), and her motivations are never quite
elucidated, beyond a generational mood of boredom. I find this archetype
even more annoying than the blank wifey type of 1960s fiction, if only
because 1970s New Women tended to have lots of viewpoint chapters where
male authors fumbled around trying to "figure out the female mind," as
it were.
George Washington Hayduke was something of a
disappointment, as well. I'd heard enough references to him to get the
idea that he was this larger than life character. An 800 mile hiking trail
is named in his honor, for goodness' sake. Maybe in 1975 a former Green
Beret and POW with PTSD was a groundbreaking character, but he just
didn't do it for me. He was pretty much just a canyonlands Rambo. Maybe I
expected something more gonzo. (I expected the book to be funnier and
weirder than it was, in general.) I was far more interested in Seldom
Seen Smith and Doc Sarvis, who naturally enough are given the least
amount of screentime out of the main four.
Embarrassing confession time: Somehow I'd gotten this vague idea over the years that The Monkey Wrench Gang
was a talking animal fable, something along the lines of the animals
all get sick of humankind's assholery and rise up in a Four Corners
ecoterrorist Animal Farm. The famous George Washington Hayduke,
in my imagination, was probably a literal monkey or something, while
Seldom Seen Smith (whom I'd also heard of at some point) was like a
greasy jack-of-all-trades jackrabbit, or whatever. I have no idea where I
got this impression. Maybe at some point I saw a paperback edition that
had a banana on the cover? Since Abbey is noticeably more skilled at
writing about animals and nature than he is at writing fictional people,
who knows -- maybe it would've been a better book if it had been.
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