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Just as important is what writing the book did to Stegner's thinking. Beyond the Hundredth Meridian is a visionary story of the West, but it is also a biography of Powell's beautiful mind. Powell was, according to Stegner, "incorrigibly sane," a man who tried to dispense with fable and "dispel the mists," a man who saw the facts and not the romance. The real enemies were not just greedy and stubborn congressmen but "credulity, superstition, habit." In many ways Stegner subsumed Powell's own thinking and brought it into a new century. Ideas that were before then half-formed for Stegner became habitual. Like Powell himself, Stegner had a "bolder, generalizing imagination" than most who struggle to think historically, and, like Powell, he liked to apply his mind to actual problems in the actual world. Both men believed that through hard thought and focused clarity we can get at certain truths. That our minds, uncultivated, go where they will, to the till or trough, but that trained and focused, they can be put to good, and even selfless, purpose. It was an old-fashioned value and one shared by both biographer and subject.

( David Gessner )
[ All The Wild That Remains: ]
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