By Bill Croke on 3.13.09 @ 6:07AM
Unfortunately, this writer and essayist, who died 20 years ago
tomorrow, also had a soft spot for eco-terrorism.
Cactus Ed (a nickname he liked) is dead, lo these twenty years
(March 14, 1989). He was a less controversial figure in his time
than he is today, and certainly has more readers. I recently
attended a lecture/book discussion on the author's
Desert Solitaire at my local public library, and
wasn't surprised by what I heard. Small town book clubs tend to
be the pet projects of liberals bent on "promoting literacy," and
attract likeminded people. The discussion was moderated by a
local Abbey fan, a woman of some academic credentials, and
roughly twenty people took part. I've read Desert
Solitaire twice, but went to the lecture on a whim, only
flipping through my paperback copy shortly beforehand, intending
to just listen. The group chewed over the book for 90 minutes,
and the takeaway for me was that most people there thought Abbey
to be a larger-than-life iconic character, the life transcending
the work. And they mostly agreed with his severe critique of the
management of the public lands, his ambiguous views on the
national parks, and his anarchic thoughts concerning humankind's
history and place on the planet, in general. An amusing evening.
Edward Abbey's posthumous fame lies mostly with the Green Left,
especially in the West. He's attained that iconic cult status as
a man who embodied equal parts Henry David Thoreau (Larry
McMurtry once called him "The Thoreau of the American West") and
John Muir, with an added dash of Mikhail Bakunin. Somebody who
thought and wrote, but also acted, and influenced others to act,
however indirectly. All this begs an old question: Does a writer
pushing an agenda in his work compromise the artistic integrity
of that work? In Abbey's case the answer is both yes and no,
because he was much more a polemicist than an artist.
Edward Paul Abbey was born on January 29, 1927, in Indiana,
Pennsylvania, the son of a farmer and logger. After a 1944
hitchhiking trip west at 17, he served in the U.S. Army late in
World War II and afterwards, then enrolled at the University of
New Mexico in 1948 on the G.I. Bill, eventually earning a
Master's Degree in philosophy. During this time Abbey started to
write as he began concurrently to explore the backcountry of the
Southwest in his spare time, specifically the Four Corners area
(where Utah, Colorado, Arizona, and New Mexico meet), otherwise
known as the Colorado Plateau because it's drained by that great
river.
It was among the last of Western regions to be surveyed and
mapped. In 1869, John Wesley Powell was its primary explorer when
he led a party in dories down the rapids-ravaged canyons of the
Green and Colorado Rivers from Green River, Wyoming, all the way
through the Grand Canyon. It's an unforgiving region of deserts
and mountains, much of it federal land, and home to a half dozen
national parks. Here Abbey found the subject that was the focus
of his four decades as a writer.
Abbey started as a novelist with a run into the 1960s with series
of competently executed but forgettable books such as
Jonathan Troy (1954), The Brave Cowboy (1956),
and Fire on the Mountain (1962). The Brave
Cowboy was made into Lonely Are the Brave (1962), a
film starring Kirk Douglas, thus earning Abbey some much-needed
Hollywood money. During this time he also churned out essays and
journalism about his wanderings in "the back of beyond."
Money was tight, though, and Abbey also worked odd jobs through
the 1950s and '60s. His most noteworthy employment was as a
seasonal ranger at Arches National Monument (now Arches National
Park) near Moab, Utah, in 1959. This experience (along with
others) culminated in the 1968 publication of Desert
Solitaire, the book that made his reputation. After that,
Cactus Ed became the Thoreau of the West.
The book is in some ways an episodic pastiche. Abbey alternates
vividly written chapters describing the multi-hued landscapes of
Arches and elsewhere with others featuring cranky polemics about
Bureau of Reclamation river dams and "Industrial Tourism." But
those sharp landscape renderings are some of the finest writing
extant about the desert Southwest. Here he is in Glen Canyon
before the eponymous dam was built (1963) that created Lake
Powell:
The sandstone walls rise higher than ever before, rounding off
on top as half-domes and capitols, golden and glowing in the
sunlight, a deep radiant red in the shade.
And this from the same trip:
Beyond the side canyon the walls rise again, slick and
monolithic, in color a blend of pink, buff, yellow, orange,
overlaid in part with a glaze of "desert varnish" (iron oxide)
or streaked in certain places with vertical draperies of black
organic stains, the residue from plant life beyond the rim and
from the hanging gardens that flourish in the deep grottoes
high on the walls. Some of those alcoves are like great
amphitheatres, large as the Hollywood Bowl, big enough for
God's own symphony orchestra.
Companions to Desert Solitaire are the essays found in
such collections as The Journey Home (1977), Abbey's
Road (1979), Down the River (1982), Beyond the
Wall (1984), and One Life at a Time, Please (1988).
The subjects of the essays (the form being possibly Abbey's
greatest strength as a writer) vary from detailed accounts of his
wanderings -- rafting the Colorado, exploring such landscape
oddities as the San Rafael Swell or Big Bend National Park -- to
passionate polemics against national park infrastructure
development or Bureau of Land Management (BLM) policies on
leasing grazing land to ranchers. The latter type showed that
Abbey would have done well as an 18th-century pamphleteer. In an
essay entitled "Eco-Defense," he writes: "Eco-defense is risky
but sporting; unauthorized but fun; illegal but ethically
imperative…Spike those trees; you won't hurt them; they'll be
grateful for the protection; and you may save the forest. Loggers
hate nails."
Abbey's most controversial role was only obliquely related to his
work. In 1975 he published his novel The Monkey Wrench
Gang, a book that alongside Desert Solitaire
enhanced his reputation as an environmentalist, but unlike the
latter tome it has prose as purple as an Arizona sunset. The plot
involves four anarchic enviros who conspire to blow up Glen
Canyon Dam. In a case of life imitates art, the book inspired the
establishment of a notorious radical green group in 1980 known as
Earth First!, with Abbey as a charter member. Other noteworthy
members were activist/writer Doug Peacock, and Dave Foreman, an
ex-Goldwater Republican. Earth First! "membership" was and
remains (to the extent that it even exists today) anonymous and
shadowy, as it's known for acts of "monkey wrenching" of
earthmoving and logging equipment, spiking trees, stealing survey
stakes, cutting wire fences, and so on. "Earth First!" has
spawned ancillary groups such as the Earth Liberation Front
(ELF), which before its downfall at the hands of the FBI in 2006
burned down a Colorado ski lodge, and destroyed a number of
vehicles at an SUV dealership in Eugene, Oregon, among other acts
of domestic terrorism.
Cactus Ed was a prickly sort; a conservative anarchist, if you
will, who on one hand could support eco-terrorism (a favorite
motto was: "Keep America Beautiful -- Burn a Billboard!"), and on
the other supported the National Rifle Association (NRA), and
restrictions on immigration. When he died of natural causes, some
of his Earth First! compatriots famously and illegally absconded
with his body, and buried it in a secret place in remote desert
outside of Tucson. And there he lies to this day, pushing up
cactus.
topics:
Environmentalism, Contemporary Writers