Where did you obtain the novel? I'd like to order a copy!
I got my first copy of Donald Hamilton's novel (a 1958 Dell paperback) about 25 years ago in a used-book store, marked up to $10. Around 10 years later on eBay I was delighted to find a British hardcover edition (with dust jacket) for $20, so I gave away the paperback to a co-worker who also loves the movie. But perhaps I shouldn't have just given it away, since today I searched and find that on both eBay and the Bookfinder site people are asking from $42 up to a ridiculous $700 per copy! (Good luck with the modern search for a copy, vindici. It IS a good novel that compares intriguingly with the film -- but my search today also showed me that Dell reprinted the paperback in 1971, so there have to be even more copies out there than I had thought. Sometime I hope you find one more sensibly priced.)
I just finished the TBC novel, and in it Julie's friendship with the Terrill's had been ruined by refusing to sell Big Muddy. I wonder why the film decided to change it?
I expect this was different in the adaptation to enhance screen drama, as well as to increase the film's appeal to women. (Big productions = higher budgets, so financing studios urge filmmakers to find ways to enlarge rather than limit the prospective audience.) Compared to setting up a romantic triangle involving two bitterly estranged friends, the "female market" (and even some red-blooded males, I'll tell you firsthand!) might find more dramatic interest in making the women longtime, active friends --
especially if one of them clearly and loyally struggles to conceal her growing attraction to her best friend's fiance. It definitely works here ... since THE BIG COUNTRY is what gave me my lifelong appreciation of Jean Simmons.
So then: I never discovered this particular discussion until today; but I wonder whether its lying dormant for almost a year might mean that OP robfwoods finally watched the film a second time and decided that his accusation of this film's "plot hole" was a complete misread?
Most great films deserve a more appreciative audience than they get.
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