"The Road" by Cormac McCarthy
I just read this book and I was touched by it in many ways. "The Road" is an all to real cautionary tale of a Father and his young son struggling for survival in a post appocolyptic world where even the basic necessities of life, food, water, shelter, hope seem impossibly scarce.
Admittedly I may have been affected more by the story than some due to my tendency to relate to the main charachter (the father) and his struggle to keep his child safe and healthy. I guess some things never change. I still believe this book has something to offer everyone who reads it. It sparked discussions between my wife and I about disaster preperation, parental responsibility, and deeper questions that rarely come up in our day to day lives but cannot be avoided on "The Road"
"The Road" by Cormac McCarthy
I liked this book a lot.
It is actually a bit hard to recommend to everyone, because parts of it are somewhat disturbing, but I think it has a lot of value. To me the book was not so much a cautionary story about what might happen to our world in an apocalypse or a warning to be prepared --- it's about what happens to the human spirit in the face of absolute hopelessness. It's about the horrifying aspects of human nature that come out in desparate situations and also about the mercy and kindness that can emerge as well.
Certain questions raised by the choices that the characters have to make are profound and disturbing. Like the question of what to do with the last one or two bullets. Do you use them to fight off the people who would rape, kill, and eat you? Or do you use them on yourself? Would you kill your own child to save him from horror? Would you kill yourself? Would you share food with another person you know is going to die anyway if it means you will starve sooner? What is a good person or a bad person under these kinds of circumstances? Is mercy a luxury?
Another haunting aspect of the book is the portrayal of a dead world. There are other apocalyptic visions, although I haven't read very many, but most seem to hold out some hope that some kind of life will go on. In this book, my sense was that the world is not coming back. Almost everything is already dead. Certainly all the plants are dead. There is almost nothing left to eat, and the sense is that there will never be anything more. Everything is turning to ashes. The hopelessness of the setting is very important to the book and is portrayed convincingly.
It took me awhile to get used to the style. The prose can get a bit poetic at times, and I don't generally like that. But I did get used to it, and there wasn't as much of it as I feared when I first started the book. Also, the author doesn't use the normal punctuation for dialog. There are no quotation marks, and the author does not say who is saying what (no "I'm hungry," the boy said. Just I'm hungry.) I eventually got used to it, but I always think something like that is kind of gimicky. I think he does it to emphasize the bleak tone, and maybe to convey the sense of the rules breaking down, but I don't really like it. Also, neither of the main characters has a name that is revealed --- it's always the man or the boy. I'm not sure if I like that either.
Anyway, I would recommend it if you are OK with a few horrors. These are not stylized over-the-top horrors that you can just ignore as unreal either --- they are convincing, and they get to you if you are at all sensitive.
"The Road" by Cormac McCarthy
Has anyone else read this book? I'm interested in seeing other people's comments.
I saw the movie "No Country for Old Men," which is based on a Cormac McCarthy book. I really liked the movie. But quite a few movie critics mentioned that the movie is much better than the book. And a few literary critics of "The Road" mentioned that this book is more readable than some of his others. Has anyone read anything else by Cormac McCarthy other than "The Road"? How were some of his other books?
"The Road" by Cormac McCarthy
Ive read a review of it once seemed interesting, I may have too look into it in the future, I got a lot of stuff I'm reading at the moment, not to mention textbooks too.
"The Road" by Cormac McCarthy
Quote:
Originally Posted by dragonrider
Has anyone else read this book? I'm interested in seeing other people's comments.
I saw the movie "No Country for Old Men," which is based on a Cormac McCarthy book. I really liked the movie. But quite a few movie critics mentioned that the movie is much better than the book. And a few literary critics of "The Road" mentioned that this book is more readable than some of his others. Has anyone read anything else by Cormac McCarthy other than "The Road"? How were some of his other books?
My wife has read The Road and deemed it more readable than All the Pretty Horses. She's also read No Country for Old Men and Outer Dark. She likes McCarthy. Don't know how she rated those others on readability. She's trying to get me to read The Road, but I'd rather she read it to me so I can try and interrupt her concentration.
"The Road" by Cormac McCarthy
I picked up the book No Country for Old Men at a used bookstore, and I'm going to read it when I get the chance. I really liked the movie.
"The Road" by Cormac McCarthy
i've read this book. one of two books ever that brought me to tears. good work.
"The Road" by Cormac McCarthy
I loved this book, read it over the summer. The end was absolutely heart-wrenching.
"The Road" by Cormac McCarthy
That's sort of the problem with McCarthy, he's a brilliant writer, but disturbing. I've recently been trying to work my way through Blood Meridian but am finding it too disturbing in spots to really devour. However, many people consider this to be his best work. Even Harold Bloom (probably the most whitebread, privileged, misogynistic, old guard literary critic that anybody bothers lending an ear to) considers it to be America's highest literary achievement of the last 50 years. But it sure is brutal.