In his National Book Award-winning novel Augustus, John Williams
uncovered the secrets of ancient Rome. With Butcher's Crossing, his
fiercely intelligent, beautifully written western, Williams dismantles
the myths of modern America.
It is the 1870s, and Will Andrews, fired up by Emerson to seek "an
original relation to nature," drops out of Harvard and heads west. He
washes up in Butcher's Crossing, a small Kansas town on the outskirts of
nowhere. Butcher's Crossing is full of restless men looking for ways
to make money and ways to waste it. Before long Andrews strikes up a
friendship with one of them, a man who regales Andrews with tales of
immense herds of buffalo, ready for the taking, hidden away in a
beautiful valley deep in the Colorado Rockies. He convinces Andrews to
join in an expedition to track the animals down. The journey out is
grueling, but at the end is a place of paradisal richness. Once there,
however, the three men abandon themselves to an orgy of slaughter, so
caught up in killing buffalo that they lose all sense of time. Winter
soon overtakes them: they are snowed in. Next spring, half-insane with
cabin fever, cold, and hunger, they stagger back to Butcher's Crossing
to find a world as irremediably changed as they have been.