Wallace Stegner is known as the dean of American “Western” writers. “Big Rock Candy Mountain” is his first successful novel, published in 1938. It is autobiographical, centering around the married couple Bo and Elsa Mason and their two children, Chet and Bruce.
It is also about the search for home. Western migration involved both leaving home, and seeking a new home. Bo Mason is a nomad, frustrated by his abusive family he runs away and moves about the West, always seeking, never satisfied. He also repeats his own abusive history with his own family. Elsa wants nothing so much as a home to call her own – but it will never happen. Bo is too troubled. He can't stay put. The myth of hardy, Western individualism is lampooned in Bo, who always thinks the “big score” is around the next bend in the road. He sees the mythical Big Rock Candy Mountain of song awaiting, just over the rise, where “the bulldogs all have rubber teeth and the hens lay soft boiled eggs.” He's energetic and talented – but his dream is the easy score, and he will settle for nothing less.
Elsa is the good wife and mother, kind, supportive and loving. She turns against Bo only when it is necessary to protect their children from his abuse.
The novel is not easy to read. It's not difficult intellectually, but emotionally. I've just finished it, and I feel as though I've been abused. But Bo and Elsa are two of the great fictional characters, and the emotional turmoil they bring to the reader is justified by the profundity of their depiction. Highly recommended.