I highly recommend the biography of Archbishop Jean Baptiste Lamy (1814-1888) by Paul Horgan. “Lamy of Sante Fe” won the Pulitzer Prize in 1975 and is one of the great standards of American non-fiction. I was drawn to the book because I came across Paul Horgan’s short stories in a number of fiction anthologies. He is a powerful, concise, and wise short story writer. His non-fiction is much different, but I was not disappointed. The tone was cool, the pace slow, but the writing style worked well as a counterpoint to the energy and ambition of Lamy. This is a great western story: a rifle-carrying immigrant priest rides horseback hundreds of miles a day to serve his people. His legacy is not perfect, but his commitment to education, medicine, and agriculture was heroic. The physical stamina and courage of Lamy astounds. Many of the colleges, hospitals, orphanages, and schools that now exist in the Southwest were started by Lamy. His life was dramatic, but also frustratingly ponderous at times. He fought the church, the government, and bandits to establish what he considered the basics of civilization. It is said that a woman went up to Paul Horgan after a reading and said, you ought to write a book about this man. And he did. Willa Cather’s “Death Comes for the Archbishop” was also based on the life of Lamy.

Everything I have ever read by Paul Horgan has been excellent. His works deserve to be talked about and praised and kept alive. He is a great writer.