Monday, July 30, 2007

The Road

I am unfortunately and somewhat shamefacedly unfamiliar with the work of Cormac McCarthy. All the Pretty Horses has been on my shelf for over a year now, despite me having started and enjoyed it, then for some reason been distracted. I may now restart it with renewed interest having read The Road this weekend, McCarthy's recent Pulitzer Prize winning and Oprah-celebrated novel.

As I understand it, McCarthy is a novelist who has largely worked within the West, that broad and unrepressable American myth. The Road, however, deals instead with the mythic future of the post-apocalypse, describing the journey of a man and his son across an America burned and shattered by some unspecific catastrophe. These two legendary spaces bear some similarities - just ask Kevin Kostner. Each is defined by its landscape, and each demands survival of its characters, survival against the wilderness, and against lawlessness. The Road's desperate family are migrants - pioneers - who must live off an unfamiliar land, scavenging ghost-cities and ashen forest floors, endure the terrible elements, and avoid the roaming savages who have shed civilisation in favour of brutish cannibalism. They do not head West , however, but South, to escape the killing winters; and they do not travel with either certain or illusory promises of gold and land, orange groves and opportunity. They go with no "long term goals," as they realise, only the ebbing determination to live, the vague hope of encountering other "good guys," and most importantly, the assurance that they are "keeping the fire."

The fire is the remaining embers of old values, old culture, and keeping it is no easy task. The man (unnamed, as are all in this world), must represent to his son, born in the months following the catastrophe, the memory of the old world. They play cards with an incomplete deck, forgetting the old rules so inventing new games; they lose their books so must invent new stories; the child plays with a toy truck, while real trucks, to the extent that they now exist, only represent danger and fear; the father carves a crude flute for his son, who can only play tuneless weird sounds - the last music - and who eventually discards the instrument. The fire, however, is perhaps best and most fully represented in their simple refusal to eat of the most available nourishment - other humans. It is an extraordinary book, written with brilliantly stark and lyrical language, frightening and redemptive. Do what Oprah tells you - read it!

2 comments:

Anonymous said...

Sounds interesting. In a similar vein, have you ever had a look at "The Last American" by John Wagner, Alan Grant and Mike McMahon. In short, it's a comic in which a cryogenically preserved GI wakes up after nuclear war, travels across devastated America in search of surviving humans accompanied only by eccentric robots programmed to keep him sane, encounters only ruins, ghosts and hallucinations, and eventually a glimmer of hope to the west of the Appalachians. Although saying "in a similar vein" seems a little silly, as there's probably more than enough post apocalyptic american stuff to keep everyone reading 24/7 right up until a genuine apocalypse happens, but this is unlike anything else I've encountered in the genre, both in being a bit more realistic in certain ways, and being quite unrealistic and symbolic in others. It also features some of the finest, if willfully eccentric, comics art I've ever seen.

Roger said...

That also sounds interesting, I'll try and have a look - there is certainly a woeful lack of eccentric robots in McCarthy's tale.