Robert Laxalt is a Basque-American writer from Nevada, brother of Paul Dominique Laxalt, former governor and senator from the state of Nevada. He is also father of writer Monique Laxalt .
Sweet Promised Land (1957), his first and possibly best-known book, was based on the history of his father Dominique and his return to the homeland after forty-seven years as an immigrant sheepherder in the American West.
Basque identity
Laxalt brought Basque identity to the forefront of those living in the Western States. Born on a livestock ranch during the Great Depression, he saw his father went out on the road doing whatever he could to make a living cause the depresion. His mother heard that there was a Basque hotel in Carson City for sale called the French Hotel. The business went pretty well and even during Prohibition the hotels served wine. The clientele were more American than Basque. The politicians took a liking to Paul at the time, said he'd be governor some day. Eventually his father bought some ewes again and started buying private land so he would be able to run his sheep. He never wanted to be big again, because it was too risky.In the hotel there were also many miners, prospectors and buckaroos. In town, the Basques would wear their best suits every day. His father almost went crazy staying in the hotel, wanted to be outside in the mountains running sheep and cattle.
They knew most of the other families in the area, would travel around all the time. His father had only one American sheepherder, but he lost sheep. The significance of the Basque hotels were that they were a home away from home for the sheepherders, where they could speak Basque, play cards and have good food. About the herders, what they did and how they felt about their lifestyle. Who were the best sheepherders according to someone, scots and irishmen but the Basques would always stay with the sheep and never leave them. (Declarations taken by the Basque Oral History Project [1].)
Books by Robert Laxalt
- "The Violent Land: Tales the Old Timers Tell", 1950
- "Sweet Promised Land" 1957
- "A Man in the Wheatfield" 1964. Selected by the American Library Association as one of the six notable works of American fiction that year.
- "Nevada," 1971
- "In a Hundred Graves: A Basque Portrait," 1972
- "Nevada: A Bicentennial History," 1977
- "A Cup of Tea in Pamplona," 1985. Nominated for a 1985 Pulitzer Prize in fiction.
- "A Basque Hotel" 1989. Nominated for a Pulitzer Prize.
- "A Time We Knew: Images of Yesterday in the Basque Homeland," 1990
- "The Child of the Holy Ghost" 1992
- "A Lean Year and Other Stories" (16 short stories), 1994
- "The Governor's Mansion" 1994
- "Dust Devils" 1997
- "A Private War: An American Code Officer in the Belgian Congo," 1998
- "The Land of My Fathers: A Son's Return to the Basque Country," 1999
- "Time of the Rabies," 2000
- "Travels With My Royal: A Memoir of the Writing Life," available May 2001
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