Showing posts with label Novels. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Novels. Show all posts

Friday, June 20, 2008

The Road Less Traveled


The Road by Cormac McCarthy is a novel that should be made into a movie. I've heard it will be, and it makes sense, as it includes the stuff that Hollywood loves to put into cinema. Violence. Gunfights. One man against the odds. The end of the world. Cheap thrills usually, but I hope the movie doesn't make the mistake of leaving out what makes this novel achieve the status of greatness.

Because McCarthy takes the novel and makes it ask the kind of questions that all great novels ask. The importance of living at all costs against the quality of that life, the struggle to find faith in a world that seems to harbor nothing but malice, and more.

McCarthy's writing is as usual beautiful, even though he writes a story that is often horrible in the events that transpire in it. The Road is a meditation on what it means to be human in the face of inhumanity, and it never takes the easy route in supplying an answer. Hollywood doesn't usually like that kind of dilemma, but McCarthy has enough guts tell his story so that the theme haunts you. Let's hope the movie doesn't resolve it in a way that cheapens what resonates even after you come to The Road's end.

I give The Road four out of five garlics.

Wednesday, June 11, 2008

El Camino Real


The Road by Cormac McCarthy. Read it before the movie comes out. A great way to impress a date is to let them know that you can read. It what separates you from a low wage job. Anyways back to the book.

The books starts with the end of the world, well more the end of civilized society as we know it. What you know at the beginning is that a man and his son survive. What they have do is simply figure out how to stay alive. So they hit the road, pardon the bad pun, and begin a journey. Interesting questions arise from the book: Is there a God? What is right or wrong when your trying to stay alive? Who can you really trust? Can you even trust yourself? But the most important question is what is humanity? McCarthy makes an attempt to answer them as simply as possible. What you have to figure out while reading the book is, whether the road leads to new beginnings or toward the end. A great summer book.

It gets 4 out 5 garlics .