What is a Western Writer?
By Jory Sherman
We are the long-stilled voices of your ancestors
speaking from the past. We are echoes of those who were already here in the
We are the people with long memories who sat by lonesome campfires and listened
to the stories told under the stars. We are the ones who first saw the
greatness of the land and the mingling of peoples, who found the gold and the
timber and the oil, who saw life and death and greed and avarice and theft and
slaughter. We are those who remind you of who you are, where you came from and
where you are going.
We are your conscience and your guilt. We are those who surveyed the unnamed
places and put names and measurements to towns and cities and rivers and
streams and mountains and valleys. We are those who followed the buffalo and
the eagle, who first spoke to the Redman in sign language and died on trackless
plains with dreams in our hearts and prayers on our lips.
We are the chroniclers of those times when our nation was raw and young and
untamed and restless and without boundaries. We are the voices of all who came
westward and we speak to those now living and to those who will come after and
wonder what the land was like, and who the people were and what happened over
the centuries of blood and violence and progress.
We are those who paint pictures with words, who relate the forgotten stories,
who look into the dark caves and light a torch so that all may see what lies
inside and beyond.
We are those who live part of our lives in the past and ride a horse called
History and who bring life to everything and everyone who died on the westward
trek.
We are who you really are if you will but look in your hearts and wonder. We
come from everywhere and come in all sizes and shapes. We are people born of
another time and place who inscribe our stories in your hearts. We are those
who write down the names on tombstones and mark the olden trails so that you
who read us might trace the steps of your fathers and mothers, your
grandfathers and grandmothers, your great grandfathers and great grandmothers
and see what they saw and wrote down in their diaries and told their children
who told their children who then told us.
We are the observers of both fate and destiny; the alchemists who transform the
lead of the past into the gold of the future. We are the bearers of tidings,
both ill and good. We are the keepers of the flame who refuse to let the old
campfires die out.
We are those who write down what we see and hear and feel, taste and touch so
that all may know what the West really was and what it means to all future
generations. We are those who never die, who live as long as words are spoken
and ears will hear. We are those who see through the mists of time and walk
through the valleys of shadows and wander the long prairies of memory so that
you will know that we passed by all those places that are now paved over and
gouged out and dammed up and slashed down and scarred and vacant of all former
life, where the old footprints have been obliterated.
We are those now called Western writers and we are proud to carry the label. We
still ride the West on a horse called History, singing our old songs and telling
the grand stories of yesteryear.