Showing posts with label Cormac McCarthy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Cormac McCarthy. Show all posts

Monday, April 12, 2021

Blood Meridian - Cormac McCarthy

   1985; 351 pages.  Full Title: Blood Meridian or The Evening Redness in the West.  New Author? : No.  Genres : Westerns; Historical Fiction.   Overall Rating: 7*/10.

 

    Perhaps now's a good time for our protagonist, "the kid", to heed the advice of Horace Greeley and “Go west, young man”.  It’s 1847, and he’s only fourteen years old, but Tennessee holds no future for him, and anywhere west of Memphis sounds like the Land of Opportunity.  So he opts to run away from home.

 
    Somehow the kid survives, and two years later he joins a band of mercenaries led by a man named Glanton, albeit mostly to avoid spending the rest of his life in prison.  Glanton’s gang makes its money by collecting bounties on Apache scalps of any kind: male or female, young or old, warrior or civilian; and it’s kind of hard to tell an Apache scalp from any other Indian scalp, or even a Mexican scalp for that matter.

 

    So saddle up, kid, and be sure to practice your shooting.  Scalp-hunters aren't very popular with anyone, and if the locals won’t sell you their food, you’ve no choice but to forcibly take it from them.  You do what you have to in order to go on living, and you get used to leaving piles of corpses in your wake.

 

    Don’t let it bother you that the line between right and wrong often becomes very blurry.

 

What’s To Like...

    Cormac McCarthy is best known for his 2006 post-apocalyptic novel The RoadBlood Meridian is an earlier effort, published in 1985; it originally got a lukewarm reception but with time gained literary respect, to the point of where many now view it as the McCarthy's magnum opus.


    The overall timespan of the book is 1847-1878, the majority of the book covers a single year: 1849.  It is a pivotal year in the kid’s life, and most of the action takes place south of the border, often around the city of Chihuahua.  I liked the "feel" that Cormac McCarthy’s descriptions create for northern Mexico in those tumultuous days.  The three warring factions – the Apaches, the Mexicans, and the American guns-for-hire - are about equal in fighting strength and none of them trust the others one bit.  McCarthy portrays them all in an equal moral light, and I liked that.  When others are trying to kill you and food is scarce; there is no room for noble qualities, no matter what your ethnicity.

 

    Wikipedia says the theme of Blood Meridian is “the warlike nature of man”, and I’m inclined to agree.  There’s tons of violence in all sorts of forms: rape, murder, torture, scalping, fighting, starving, and even decapitation.  This is not a book for the squeamish.  The dying is not limited to the combatants – women, children, and babies are slain alongside the men, and any animal that wanders into this story is almost certainly about to die.

 

    Scalp-hunting is a dangerous profession and a lot less lucrative than you’d think.  Casualties run high in Glanton's militia and the remnants of the gang eventually drift north into the present-day American Southwest, making stops at Tucson, the Yuma ferry crossing, and San Diego.  By the end of that trek, the gang no longer exists; it’s every gunslinger for himself.

 

    The book is a wordsmith's delight – McCarthy sees no reason to use an everyday word when a high-falootin’ one is available, and it works quite well here.  Unsurprisingly, a lot of the dialogue is in conversational Spanish, given the settings.  McCarthy rarely supplies a translation of it, but I was usually able to suss out what was being said.

 

    I chuckled at the “Better Living Through Chemistry” lessons - when the gang runs out of gunpowder, a batch is made from the surrounding elements, and later on, when a medical knock-out agent is needed, the new wonder-drug of the times, ether, is used.  The fortune-telling scene involving tarot cards was interesting, and while I already knew about Fredonia, I had to look up Gnadenhutten in Wikipedia.  Finally, for the second time this year and my life, “charivari” showed up in the book I was reading.

 

Kewlest New Word ...

Jornada (n.) : an arduous usually one-day journey across a stretch of desert.

Others: Parricide (n.); Sprent (v); and dozens more.

 

Ratings…
    Amazon: 4.5*/5, based on 3,949 ratings.

    Goodreads: 4.16*/5, based on 113,698 ratings and 10,215 reviews

 

Excerpts...

    “I said are you quits?”

    “Quits?”

    “Quits.  Cause if you want some more of me you sure as hell goin’ to get it.”

    He looked at the sky.  Very high, very small, a buzzard.  He looked at the man.  “Is my neck broke?” he said.

    The man looked out over the lot and spat and looked at the boy again.  “Can you not get up?”

    “I don’t know.  I ain’t tried.”

    “I never meant to break your neck.”

    “No.”

    “I meant to kill ye.”  (pg. 10)

 

    “So what is the way of raising a child?”

    “At a young age,” said the judge, “they should be put in a pit with wild dogs.  They should be set to puzzle out from their proper clues the one of three doors that does not harbor wild lions.  They should be made to run naked in the desert until…”

    “Hold now,” said Tobin.  “The question was put in all earnestness.”

    “And the answer,” said the judge.  “If God meant to interfere in the degeneracy of mankind would he not have done so by now?  Wolves cull themselves, man.  What other creature could?  And is the race of man not more predacious yet?”  (pg. 153)

 

“I was afraid I was goin’ to die and then I was afraid I wasn’t.”  (pg. 74 )

    Blood Meridian was a slow, difficult read for me.  Cormac McCarthy has a unique writing style that you’ll either love or hate.  The use of quotation marks, apostrophes, and hyphens is taboo; and capitalizing proper nouns is arbitrary.  For the sake of clarity and my own grammar OCD-ness, I added them in the excerpts above.  Run-on sentences proliferate; and each chapter starts with a bunch of little notes that annoyingly (for me, anyway) give away any surprises that are about to occur.

 

    Then there are the lengthy landscape descriptions.  Yes, they set the scene, but the plotline stagnates while you read about the countryside, and this got tedious after a while.  There’s only so many new ways you can describe the Sonora desert and the mountains that surround it.

 

    After more than 250 pages being devoted to the events of 1849, the next three decades of the kid's life are squeezed into a mere 30, and the story grinds to a rather ambiguous ending.  The kid runs into an old acquaintance in a bar in Texas; a philosophical discussion ensues; and a mess is made in the outhouse.  Exactly what that mess consists of is not disclosed; the reader is left to draw his own conclusion.  Things wrap up with an epilogue that even Wikipedia doesn’t try to explain.

 

    7 Stars.  If you can make it through all the gore and tedium of the scalp-hunting campaign in Mexico, you'll arrive at the Yuma ferry crossing, where the pacing picks up nicely, and the storyline becomes very interesting.  Alas, even that blessing is relatively short-lived, nevertheless I'd still call Blood Meridian a worthwhile read.  I’ve never been keen on the traditional "Hollywood western" genre, and here the setting and time period were refreshingly different.  The book's back cover blurb notes the story is “based on historical events”, and since I’m a history buff, I ended up enjoying it, despite the weird writing style and interminable descriptions.

Saturday, February 21, 2009

The Road - Cormac McCarthy


2006; 287 pages. Genre : Contemporary Literature. Awards : 2007 Pulitzer Prize for Fiction; 2006 James Tait Black Memorial Prize (Fiction); Oprah's Book Club selection for April 2007. Soon to come out as a movie, starring LOTR's Aragorn. Overall Rating : B+..

   "He lay listening to the water drip in the woods. Bedrock, this. The cold and the silence. The ashes of the late world carried on the bleak and temporal winds to and fro in the void. Carried forth and scattered and carried forth again. Everything uncoupled from its shoring. Unsupported in the ashen air. Sustained by a breath, trembling and brief. If only my heart were stone."

   .In a post-apocalytpic world (most likely done in by a hit from a comet), a dying father and his son struggle just to survive another day. Ash is everywhere; all plant life is dead, as are most animals; the weather is unchanging : cold, rainy, and blowing ash; and the few remaining humans scrounge desperately for whatever scraps of food might still be found.

What's To Like...
    The father and son are two great character studies. The former remembers "the world before", but refrains from telling the son about it, for fear of depressng him about their current lot. Ironically, the son (who apparently was born right around the time of "the event") has a lot more hope and humanity within him than the dad. Yet the father's stoniness is driven by his love for the son, and his resolve for the boy to somehow survive.

    .Then there's the concept of Character Development, something almost unheard of in stories anymore. The father gradually succeeds in instilling in his son the skills and the mindset to cope with the bleak world, and in the end, their roles are almost reversed.
.
    The "e.e. cummings" literary style takes some getting used to, and some of the technical details are hard to believe - such as a dog somehow managing to survive for 10 years or so without anyone eating him. Also, if you're not in the habit of watching The History Channel's "end of the world" shows, you may find some of the horrors of this foodless world repulsive. Such as the "shish-ka-baby" scene.

"Mankind is only about three missed-meals away from degenerating into savagery."
    Cormac McCarthy is 75 years old, and this book is dedicated to his 8-year-old son. The Road seems to me to be a message to that son from a father who recognizes he won't be around for most of his kid's life. The fact that McCarthy weaves that message into an end-of-the-world setting and writes it in a unique style makes this book worthy of its Pulitzer Prize. The book offers much to think about in this world where most of us would starve in a couple days if the supermarkets and Circle-K's disappeared. But in the end, you will enjoy The Road more if you focus on the people, and not the post-apoc events.