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Dec 1

Written by: wyman
12/1/2009 10:39 AM 

Roni and I have recently finished Cormac McCarthy's stunning novel, The Road, and I am struggling with how to describe this book.  It is Faulknerian in many ways (the tone, the dialogue, the stream-of-consciousness, the bleak, brutal surroundings) and I was not surprised to find that McCarthy's first literary agent was Faulkner's as well.  Yet it is also a very distinct work that has come from a very distinct pen.  McCarthy won the Pulitzer prize for The Road, and it is easy to see why.

The story, at first glance, is simple enough:  a man and his son trying to survive (mainly along the road) in a mysteriously apocalyptic landscape.  I say "mysteriously" because we are never told what happened, though the prevailing view among readers seems to be that a massive ecological crisis has occured.  I do agree with that view, though some kind of nuclear holocaust can't be ruled out either.  Regardless, most people are dead, and most animals as well.  The food supply is gone, and those humans who remain have either embraced a despairing life of animalistic cruelty (i.e., cannabalism) or have taken a higher road and are simply seeking to survive.  The man mentions "communes" once or twice, so you gather that there are small pockets of people somewhere out there trying to rebuild some rudimentary form of society.

But the book is much more than it appears at first glance.  It is a deeply and profoundly spiritual book.  I was not surprised to read a recent interview with the director of the movie version in Christianity Today saying that McCarthy insisted to him that the references to God and the spiritual impulse of the book not be diminished in the film.  I daresay that any fair-minded reader will agree that such an omission would do serious harm to the fabric of the story.

God is "in the air" of The Road:  from the boy's simple but resolute faith, to the man's occasional Job-like cries of despair, to the continuous references to carrying "the fire" (a theme McCarthy ends No Country For Old Men with as well), to the mysterious old man's observation about the boy's belief in God.  There is more, but I do not want to say more about the actual story.

I'll only add this:  McCarthy is a profound and powerful writer and the book is stunning on many levels.  Mrs. Richardson raised a question out of the clear blue last night about the book that had been on her mind since we finished the last page two nights ago.  And that is the mark of a truly great work, isn't it?  It stays with you, haunting you almost, and continues to work in your mind and in your heart.

Read The Road.

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6 comment(s) so far...

Re: Cormac McCarthy's <i>The Road</i>: A Review

W,

Mr. McCarthy is a Santa Fe county resident. He recently put his typewriter up for auction, anticipating $15-20k for it, all of which will be donated. You can find the story here: www.telegraph.co.uk/culture/books/6711628/Cormac-McCarthys-typewriter-A-writer-and-his-tools-are-seldom-parted.html

Had I known your interest, I might have offered a bid.

With regrets, L

By Lee Herring on   12/2/2009 3:07 PM

Re: Cormac McCarthy's <i>The Road</i>: A Review

Lee,

I had seen in an article that he lives there now. Apparently he's a bit of a recluse. If you still want me to come out there in the Spring, we shall find him and force him to talk to us. If you don't, then you shall find him and take a picture for me. I am highly offended that you did not bid on that typewriter. You could've afforded it.

Have you read The Road? You need to!

W

By Wyman Richardson on   12/2/2009 3:16 PM

Re: Cormac McCarthy's <i>The Road</i>: A Review

W,

We are still planning to have you with us this Spring, so I will inform Mr. McCarthy of your impending visit. If that does not shock him out of his reclusivity, I'm sure nothing would.

As for the typewriter, I am confident I could afford the replacement. According to reports a friend bought him a replica of the one he is donating for $11.

When you visit the City Different I'll host you to Taco Bell for that.

Exclusively yours, L

By Lee Herring on   12/2/2009 7:39 PM

Re: Cormac McCarthy's <i>The Road</i>: A Review

W,

It was reported in our paper today (12/8) that Mr. McCarthy's old typewriter sold at auction for $245,000+. Just out of my price range.

Yours, L

By Lee Herring on   12/8/2009 1:15 PM

Re: Cormac McCarthy's <i>The Road</i>: A Review

Wym - This book sounds like a "must read!" I might grab a copy of it from the library and read it over Christmas. Thanks for the tip. We look forward to having you down here with us in Sebring in February. Come ready to shuck some corn! David

By David Richardson on   12/9/2009 9:44 AM

Re: Cormac McCarthy's <i>The Road</i>: A Review

Lee,

C'mon, man! You couldn't swing a quarter-of-a-million dollar typewriter for your friend, Wyman?

Dave,

Get it man. You'll love it. I'm looking forward to February too!

W

By Wyman Richardson on   12/9/2009 10:01 AM

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