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McCarthy’s Road

I highly recommend Cormac McCarthy’s “The Road”. From the first few seconds I began turning its pages, I was memorized by McCarthy’s story. I couldn’t stop thinking about it at work, when it was time to go to bed, and when I woke up in the morning. I’ve finished the novel and I still can’t stop thinking about it.

A story conceived in a post-apocalyptic world has always been my favorite setting for a tale, but few over the years have done the subject matter justice. What, zombies take over the earth again? No really, I would have never guessed.

Instead “The Road”, which was selected to Oprah’s book club and won the Pulitzer in 2007, gives a brutal, detailed account of two people, a man and a boy, who attempt to make dramatic journey to the coast in a barren, scorched and lifeless world. Food is less than scarce- the few humans that remain have turned to cannibalism.

The man desperately tries to protect the boy in this increasingly cold and hopeless world, but struggles with his own past and remaining alive in the present. Meanwhile, the only life the boy knows is one of struggle and starvation.

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4 Responses to “McCarthy’s Road”

  1. Gozer the Keymaster Says:

    Well, I hate to spoil the surprise of the plot, but does the man eat the boy?

  2. Cormac McCarthy Says:

    Actually, the way I originally wrote it, the man and the boy took turns eating each other’s buttocks flesh to survive.

  3. lbeech Says:

    Joe - do you think a 9th grade boy would enjoy this book? Evan is an avid reader - I’m trying to find more books for his summer reading.

    And huh, McCarthy, glad you changed the original story line. Geez

  4. Joe Says:

    I think Evan would really like this book - it reminded me in some ways of “The Hatchet”, which was a book I was required to read in middle or high school. The book is a really easy read. It’s exciting, scary, intense, but also sensitive and deep enough to make you think.

    The book touches on survival, hope, and the choices they have to make to stay alive in desperate times. There is also the idea raised that there may or may not be a God in a world like this, however, the main characters still hold to a moral code and consider themselves “good guys” who “carry the fire”.

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