Are there any Cormac McCarthy fans out there?

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Right - in the sense of playing with the conventions but obviously not taking them seriously. I've only read the first two - but yes, it has been a while. Must read Western Lands someday. Also the idea of "boy's adventure."

Jeff LeVine (Jeff LeVine), Sunday, 11 June 2006 15:28 (twenty years ago)

all i remember of it is a sex plague in south america, maybe i'm confused.

tom west (thomp), Sunday, 11 June 2006 16:53 (twenty years ago)

I thought I liked him for awhile, but I came to realize I was just intimidated by his pyrotechnics into assuming he actually had something to say. Now I read a few pages (a scene) here and there to admire his (magnificent) descriptive skill, but I've given up on thinking he's anything like a novelist with a story to tell or even a deep original idea to relate. I feel like his lack of ideas is what drives him to write the way he does. All hat and no horse.

steve ketchup (steve ketchup), Wednesday, 14 June 2006 13:30 (twenty years ago)

vahid does vitriol better than any other poster on ilx.

jed_ (jed), Wednesday, 14 June 2006 14:22 (twenty years ago)

I'm a huge fan. Blood Meridian and Child of God are two of my favorite books ever, and I'm reading Suttree right now. I can see a lot of vahid's points about hetero white male isolation, and that is the sort of thing that normally turns me right off, but I'm constantly thrilled by the language and the fact that the isolated hetero white males are just really creepy - I like books about creepy things and deranged people. I really liked what spittle said up thread about Blood Meridian, too.

I saw one of McCarthy's plays last week at the Steppenwolf called The Sunset Ltd. I was less impressed by this than by his books. Part of this was the acting - there was a lot of line flubbing that was very obvious and painful in the tiny theater. There was also a lot of yelling, and I got a suffocating sense of being in a tiny room with two people I didn't like who were being very unpleasant, which might have been the intended effect but still, I can sit in a tiny room with people I don’t like being unpleasant to each other for free if I patronize the right bars or go visit my family. My favorite part of the entire play was the end, when one of the characters launched into a soliloquy about pain and death and the worthlessness of living and the dreadfulness of mankind which was lovely and lyrical and very similar to the style of his novels.

I realized then pretty much what steve ketchup says - I'm deeply impressed by his pyrotechnics. I don’t know about his books not having much substance, though. I thought Child of God had an incredible story, and I think Blood Meridian has a story, too, albeit a lofty, not necessarily plot-driven one.

Safety First (pullapartgirl), Wednesday, 14 June 2006 14:28 (twenty years ago)

four months pass...
How do you dudes read the one-page epilogue to Blood Meridian? I thought it was referring the construction of the railroads, and the end of the era that could support the kind of violence and mindset that the book is about, etc. But I could be wrong?

Jordan (Jordan), Friday, 10 November 2006 16:27 (nineteen years ago)

one year passes...

I'm liking All The Pretty Horses. Don't find it to be a bore at all - fairly gripping, actually. Great dialogue - I enjoy that more than the poetic description really. So far I'd almost compare it to Jack London - fairly traditional adventure narrative but with finer writing.

Hurting 2, Thursday, 26 June 2008 12:53 (seventeen years ago)

one month passes...

He can be sorta tedious, no?

Pylon Gnasher, Monday, 4 August 2008 18:42 (seventeen years ago)

one month passes...

i'm three quarters or more through blood meridian, and if it didn't have cormac mccarthy's name on the cover then i could just as easily mistake it for one of my grandad's old western books i once found in a bag in the attic and read through one summer when i was about 15- the laboured prose style and the glee taken in the lurid violence reminds me of the 'edge' series of books in particular. i'm not at all sure where the critical acclaim has come from.

darraghmac, Saturday, 13 September 2008 02:51 (seventeen years ago)

Cities on the Plain is fantastic.

HOOS clique iphones fool get ya steen on (BIG HOOS aka the steendriver), Saturday, 13 September 2008 03:03 (seventeen years ago)

don't get me wrong- i've enjoyed both of the books of his that i've read so far. in fact, i have no country for old men waiting and i'm looking forward to it, but, i dunno, he just seems to get an awful lot of credit for what he does.

darraghmac, Saturday, 13 September 2008 03:07 (seventeen years ago)

i love blood meridian but vahid kinda has a point.

The 69, 666, 420th Beatle (latebloomer), Saturday, 13 September 2008 16:41 (seventeen years ago)

this is code for glorifying and romanticizing the conditions (the cult, really) of hetero white male isolation ... if you enjoy reification you will be happy to know that you will find yourself, as reader, grinding through endless references to leather and rawhide and denim and shaving and black coffee and whiskey and rusty metal, sort of like reading GQ or Esquire in those months when ralph lauren or tom ford are showing strong collections.

― vahid (vahid), Tuesday, March 23, 2004 6:28 PM (4 years ago) Bookmark Suggest Ban Permalink

love this, megaroffles.

The 69, 666, 420th Beatle (latebloomer), Saturday, 13 September 2008 16:43 (seventeen years ago)

i think of blood meridian as having a lot in common thematically with a history of violence (i mean you could even pretty much interchange their titles). they're both about the violence inherent to civilization or society or human relations or however narrowly you wanna draw the net. and not just that it's there, but that it's exciting and addictive and seductive. an old story i guess, but for me it works in the telling.

tipsy mothra, Sunday, 14 September 2008 04:55 (seventeen years ago)

(it's also a real reactionary view of the world, and mccarthy is an unapologetic reactionary. which should make me sort of hate him, but doesn't.)

tipsy mothra, Sunday, 14 September 2008 04:56 (seventeen years ago)

well i read no country for old men since and enjoyed it very much. blood meridian didn't get any better though, the stream-of-consciousness style just didn't bring me with it.

darraghmac, Monday, 15 September 2008 12:10 (seventeen years ago)

boy i really didn't like no country. i think it's the phoniest book of his i read. (didn't like the movie much either.)

tipsy mothra, Tuesday, 16 September 2008 14:30 (seventeen years ago)

i think i was just relieved to read something a little more pleasant than blood meridian, tbh

darraghmac, Tuesday, 16 September 2008 16:27 (seventeen years ago)

And I thought everyone else had read all of McC. I finished Blood Meridian in the last week or so and was on the yea side. Okay, I am susceptible to the romanticism of male isolation, but what goes on between me and the book I'm reading is my business, right.

It was a strange book: you know there's no story, and that it's really just a relentless machine repeating a stock set of 3 or 4 scenes, but I found it compulsive material. If anything I liked it more when it stuck to its unpicturesque picaresque than when it got all mytho-allegorical at the end with the judge and the retard. In one way, it felt less like reading and more like observing a wave of something like insects swarming over a field, destroying what came into their path, getting involved in inscrutable scrapes, etc. That makes me sound like a sci-fi fan, which I'm not intending, moreso nature doco. Which is perhaps more embarrassing than the violence/male isolation admission, but there you go.

Judging from the above, I think I'll go Suttree next. Not much mention here of The Road, which is a bit funny, no? (Not that I've read it either, but my wife had it on her bedside table and I'd sneak guilty peeks when she was out of the room. Well, they were less guilt than the revulsion/fascination thing)

David Joyner, Wednesday, 17 September 2008 01:46 (seventeen years ago)

When hes not getting bogged down in his weird little philosophical debates between characters (Blood Meridian and the coda of Cities of the Plain feature doozies) he often seems to me to be some sort of crazed genius. His writing - for atmosphere and description of action and landscape in particular - is unmatched in America today.

The philosophical debates were the only thing I really liked about Blood Meridian! I thought that book needed more ideas. So much of it was awe-inspiring, and I mean that in both a good way and a bad way: awe is nice, but it doesn't make you think -- in fact, it discourages thought. I felt like I had to turn on my brain again after prolonged periods of reading. Maybe I'd appreciate it more if I reread it, though, because the apparent aimlessness of the narrative was something I really struggled with (I probably would've given up if I hadn't had the ending spoiled for me halfway through; I was finding it impossible to believe that anything would ever happen -- again, it's just too awe-inspiring, too mind-numbing, too... inhuman).

The chapter where they're trying to make gunpowder to fight off the Indians was pretty exciting, though.

it be me, me, me and timothy (bernard snowy), Wednesday, 17 September 2008 02:57 (seventeen years ago)

if it didn't have cormac mccarthy's name on the cover then i could just as easily mistake it for one of my grandad's old western books

this boggles my mind. I mean, I've read enough Louis L'Amour (care of MY grandad) to know that Blood Meridian is leagues ahead of the average western potboiler. Ahead in terms of the writing and characterization. Whatever you want to say about the characters in Blood Meridian, almost wholly despicable human beings, at least they're not cookie cutter cowboys n indians. Also in terms of the storytelling, the approach is quite different. Blood Meridian is much more episodic and less propulsive than the average good guy/bad guy gunfight.

Do McCarthy fans like Hall's "Warlock"?

ian, Saturday, 20 September 2008 04:07 (seventeen years ago)

i loved loved loved Warlock

Mr. Que, Saturday, 20 September 2008 13:37 (seventeen years ago)

the "cookie cutter cowboys'n'indians" of a men's adventure novel probably have more resemblance to actual people living or dead than most of cormac mccarthy's characters.

moonship journey to baja, Sunday, 21 September 2008 18:42 (seventeen years ago)

yes, but i don't agree with the implied value judgment that realist characters are necessarily better.

ian, Sunday, 21 September 2008 21:02 (seventeen years ago)

"a men's adventure novel" = should be a movie title.

ian, Sunday, 21 September 2008 21:02 (seventeen years ago)

or a book by michael chabon

remy bean, Sunday, 21 September 2008 21:07 (seventeen years ago)

yes, but i don't agree with the implied value judgment that realist characters are necessarily better

that's an interesting line of argument

moonship journey to baja, Monday, 22 September 2008 00:38 (seventeen years ago)

really

moonship journey to baja, Monday, 22 September 2008 00:38 (seventeen years ago)

Pound's statement “fundamental accuracy of statement is the one sole morality of writing”

stolen from the raymond carver thread on ILE, for reference

moonship journey to baja, Monday, 22 September 2008 00:39 (seventeen years ago)

whoops somehow the word statement got doubled up there

moonship journey to baja, Monday, 22 September 2008 00:40 (seventeen years ago)

In response to Pound (I assume we're talking Unc Ez here?) All this realism hokum is overrated. That 'accuracy of statement' phooey doesn't really mean anything, does it, at least not for fiction? I mean, the great advantage of fiction over factual writing is the problem of selection doesn't really come up - you're not leaving anything out, what is written is part of that fictional reality, what isn't written, doesn't exist. No, the problem in fiction is one of emphasis.

Certainly an overemphasis on exploration of character can be extremely disruptive to tone in some genres - science fiction and horror spring immediately to mind. I'm not saying it can't be done, just that thin two-dimensional, rather everyman, possibly even cliched characters can be an advantage in those forms.

GamalielRatsey, Monday, 22 September 2008 03:28 (seventeen years ago)

what is written is part of that fictional reality, what isn't written, doesn't exist

that sounds more like the attitude of a particularly decadent 21st century reader than that of a writer

moonship journey to baja, Monday, 22 September 2008 05:09 (seventeen years ago)

Hmmm, not sure about that. It maybe came across as more abstract than I intended. It's just a way of saying that, say, in writing a biography, part of the problem is knowing what to leave out as much as what to put in, it's to do with selection (although bloody try telling that to modern biographers, everything bar the kitchen bloody sink), in fiction that's not an issue. Although in terms of writing you inevitably edit and leave vast chunks that you've written out, the finished product is just that, it is sufficient unto itself.

I'm not sure I feel particularly decadent saying that. I don't know really, because I'm lying in bed dreadfully tired after a curry induced sleepless night.

Anyway, I don't really think it affects the central premise that characters and fiction need not be realistic, that's a relatively recent thing isn't it? Is Jeeves realistic? Is Sherlock Holmes? They're just very well drawn characters.

GamalielRatsey, Monday, 22 September 2008 06:42 (seventeen years ago)

Christ, listen to me. What a boring git. I've woken up now and want not to have written these things on this thread in the way that I writ em.

GamalielRatsey, Monday, 22 September 2008 09:20 (seventeen years ago)

"the "cookie cutter cowboys'n'indians" of a men's adventure novel probably have more resemblance to actual people living or dead than most of cormac mccarthy's characters.

― moonship journey to baja, 21 September 2008 18:42 (1 week ago) Bookmark "

totally. the campfire philosophical debates between the judge and the priest seemed forced and out of place, even if the characters (especially the judge) were entertaining.

darraghmac, Tuesday, 30 September 2008 10:39 (seventeen years ago)

suttree is fantastic

Tracer Hand, Tuesday, 30 September 2008 23:34 (seventeen years ago)

one month passes...

outer dark was teh only book i was able to finish. it was good, like climbing a mountain is good. child of god is the one i want to read.

suttree appears to be a very high mountain.

goofus vs. gallant (Drugs A. Money), Thursday, 30 October 2008 15:34 (seventeen years ago)

child of god is the one i want to read next

goofus vs. gallant (Drugs A. Money), Thursday, 30 October 2008 15:34 (seventeen years ago)

getting through blood meridian felt more like digging a hole

Jordan, Thursday, 30 October 2008 15:39 (seventeen years ago)

digging a hole to bury someone in

darraghmac, Thursday, 30 October 2008 15:40 (seventeen years ago)

i tried to get through blood meridian three times

\;_;/

Mr. Que, Thursday, 30 October 2008 15:40 (seventeen years ago)

Should've stuck with reading it once first.

Øystein, Thursday, 30 October 2008 15:55 (seventeen years ago)

it took you fifteen minutes to come up with that??

Mr. Que, Thursday, 30 October 2008 15:56 (seventeen years ago)

Yup

Øystein, Thursday, 30 October 2008 16:23 (seventeen years ago)

cormac could've written a chapter killing off an entire village in that space of time.

darraghmac, Thursday, 30 October 2008 16:40 (seventeen years ago)

I'm a fan. Enjoyed reading "Blood Meridian". But I wonder if his allusions to Melville, Milton, and Wordsworth add more weight to the novel than it deserves. Some parts are overwritten, and I don't know what I'm supposed to do with all that blood.

silence dogood, Thursday, 30 October 2008 17:28 (seventeen years ago)

michael chabon on mccarthy & apocalyptic fiction: http://www.nybooks.com/articles/19856

Jordan, Thursday, 30 October 2008 18:13 (seventeen years ago)

wow, great article

Mr. Que, Thursday, 30 October 2008 18:21 (seventeen years ago)

agreed.

goofus vs. gallant (Drugs A. Money), Thursday, 30 October 2008 22:55 (seventeen years ago)

Great stylist, good on campy (not that he sees it so no sir) Southern Gothic crap, takes himself way too seriously.

Niles Caulder, Friday, 31 October 2008 07:13 (seventeen years ago)

I really liked NCFOM, maybe not quite as much as the film, but it's good stuff.

omar little, Tuesday, 13 June 2023 22:25 (three years ago)

When death isn't enough to cancel the guy

look i'm not a big literary brain or a contributor to the new left review or anything, but i do think poverty *is* bad? no-one should *have* to eat only beans or bathe in lakes and if i was married to a v successful writer and having to do that i'd prob be a bit salty about it https://t.co/97oOnpadgA

— fish tit supremacy (@tubbsOreally) June 14, 2023

xyzzzz__, Wednesday, 14 June 2023 12:52 (three years ago)

The very notion of artistic principles is passing along with writers like McCarthy.

Chris L, Wednesday, 14 June 2023 13:10 (three years ago)

oddly Pretty Horses was on tv last night. i don't remember having seen it before.

koogs, Wednesday, 14 June 2023 13:19 (three years ago)

I never saw it but it was yet another one where people later griped that Weinstein butchered the director's cut.

Chris L, Wednesday, 14 June 2023 13:25 (three years ago)

I wish The Road was a better movie. The book remains my favorite of his.

I. J. Miggs (dandydonweiner), Thursday, 15 June 2023 15:32 (three years ago)

Quite an arc.

https://www.nytimes.com/2023/06/19/opinion/cormac-mccarthy-publishing.html

xyzzzz__, Monday, 19 June 2023 13:09 (two years ago)

Did Suttree and Blood Meridian really go out of print before 1992 and get saved by All the Pretty Horses? I seem to recall buying and reading them before AtPH was published. Maybe they went back into publication immediately beforehand.

Holly Godarkbloom (James Redd and the Blecchs), Monday, 19 June 2023 14:22 (two years ago)

Shortly before, as in early in 1992.

Holly Godarkbloom (James Redd and the Blecchs), Monday, 19 June 2023 14:22 (two years ago)

Thinking there was a build-up, a run-up.

Holly Godarkbloom (James Redd and the Blecchs), Monday, 19 June 2023 14:24 (two years ago)

before 1992 blood meridian existed without my knowledge and therefore without my consent

𝔠𝔞𝔢𝔨 (caek), Monday, 19 June 2023 19:15 (two years ago)

Suttree had a nice yuppie Vintage Contemporaries edition in the mid/late 1980s.

underwater as a compliment (Eazy), Monday, 19 June 2023 22:51 (two years ago)

Thanks! The ones I had were Vintage Internationals of a later, um, vintage, do u see? They had kind of a mostly black and white layout with some Guy Maddin smeared blur of a few other colors in the background overlaid by a kind of gold paint lettering design.

Holly Godarkbloom (James Redd and the Blecchs), Tuesday, 20 June 2023 04:50 (two years ago)

Which vintage did indeed seem to be early 1992.

Holly Godarkbloom (James Redd and the Blecchs), Tuesday, 20 June 2023 05:10 (two years ago)

three months pass...

The punctuation in Blood Meridian versus the punctuation in Absalom, Absalom! pic.twitter.com/bv0MjfwKNu

— Claudia Durastanti (@CDurastanti) June 14, 2023

xyzzzz__, Thursday, 5 October 2023 08:29 (two years ago)

one year passes...

https://www.theguardian.com/books/2024/nov/20/cormac-mccarthy-began-relationship-with-16-year-old-while-42-and-married

if you like this you might like my brothers music. his name is Stu Morr (Tom D.), Wednesday, 20 November 2024 22:58 (one year ago)

If any confirmation was needed that he was a Republican.

Booger Swamp Road (Boring, Maryland), Wednesday, 20 November 2024 23:20 (one year ago)

https://defector.com/can-someone-please-write-normally-about-this-fascinating-woman

Allen (etaeoe), Wednesday, 20 November 2024 23:26 (one year ago)

at a motel pool!

tuah dé danann (darraghmac), Wednesday, 20 November 2024 23:26 (one year ago)

https://defector.com/can-someone-please-write-normally-about-this-fascinating-woman

― Allen (etaeoe), Wednesday, November 20, 2024 11:26 PM (yesterday)

I don't know about the Vanity Fair piece but this Defector piece is definitely a difficult read

corrs unplugged, Thursday, 21 November 2024 07:50 (one year ago)

Especially if you're not a subscriber.

if you like this you might like my brothers music. his name is Stu Morr (Tom D.), Thursday, 21 November 2024 08:10 (one year ago)

You can read it on archive.ph

xyzzzz__, Thursday, 21 November 2024 08:13 (one year ago)

I don't know about the Vanity Fair piece but this Defector piece is definitely a difficult read

― corrs unplugged, Thursday, 21 November 2024 bookmarkflaglink

It hammered the basic point for far too long. What might be interesting is to takk about why this story was let out like that. Pretty obv the guy had this story and wanted to tell it like he wanted with no interference and Vanity Fair sucked it up.

Which in this case was a catastrophic error.

xyzzzz__, Thursday, 21 November 2024 08:17 (one year ago)

the writing on the VF piece is shit

a (waterface), Thursday, 21 November 2024 15:16 (one year ago)

What a world

https://slate.com/culture/2024/11/cormac-mccarthy-vanity-fair-augusta-britt-vincenzo-barney-interview.html

𝔠𝔞𝔢𝔨 (caek), Saturday, 23 November 2024 02:51 (one year ago)


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