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Book: "The Road" by Cormac McCarthy

A forum to either submit your own review of a book, video or audio interview, or to post reviews by others.

Re: Worst Case Post Apoc Scenario: The Road, by Cormac Mccar

Unread postby mgibbons19 » Thu 17 May 2007, 14:12:52

It is kind of scary-creepy ot think that anything ugly you can dream up has been experienced by someone.

Being a slave watching your children abused by your owner, and powerless to help.

Being an irishman when the vikings arrived.

Being in the jewish ghettos is a good example.

Being punished for running away from your husband by having a hot coal from the fire bound into your kneepit, crippling you for life.

Being the mother in the russian school bombing forced to choose which child to send out.
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Book: The Road by Cormac McCarthy

Unread postby gampy » Sat 02 Jun 2007, 01:08:07

Anyone read this? I am about half way throught the book. Wow. Just wow. Doomer porn, indeed.

EDIT: While the book is not about peak oil, it does posit a scenario of what the total breakdown of life on the planet might look like.
The author never mentions how the "world went away", but I don't think it's nuclear war. I am thinking more along the lines of a large comet, or supervolcano.
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Re: "The Road", by Cormac McCarthy

Unread postby snowshoegal » Sat 02 Jun 2007, 08:43:08

Hi Gampy,

I've read it, total doomer porn. I really appreciated that McCarthy did not specifically explain what caused the devastation scenario, leaving you to your own conclusions about it politically, environmentally, etc.

His stark, unrelenting descriptions of the gray landscape are haunting as hell. I found myself looking up from the pages and being momentarily shocked at the colours around me. The light, the green of the trees, and the sounds of the birds outside almost seemed like a dream.

Half way through, eh? It's only just begun... :wink:
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Re: "The Road", by Cormac McCarthy

Unread postby roccman » Sat 02 Jun 2007, 09:24:18

Yep - read it...hardest easy read I ever came across,
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Re: "The Road", by Cormac McCarthy

Unread postby nella » Sat 02 Jun 2007, 11:43:53

I read it and it was hard to put it down.
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Re: "The Road", by Cormac McCarthy

Unread postby I_Like_Plants » Sat 02 Jun 2007, 14:05:34

I probably ought to go to Barns'n'Borders this weekend and read it. This store is cool - they really don't care if you read books all day, they have a coffee shop and make it up on coffee and buns, and even though I really hate buying books, I do end up buying them once in a while there.
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Re: "The Road", by Cormac McCarthy

Unread postby gampy » Sat 09 Jun 2007, 05:31:47

Well I finished it, and oh boy, did I cry at the end. A really good cry. Not a sad cry.

What a great book. I think this story kind of transcends the doomer, or post-apocalyptic stereotype.

It's a book about good and evil, in my mind. And Father and Sons.

While it is riveting, and powerful, vis-a-vis the descriptions of the landscape, and other people the two main characters meet, I think this story speaks to the inherent goodness (and evil) in people, sans conditioning, and experience.

The boy is born into that world, but he is the guide post and inspiration for the father, who tries his best to be a "good guy".

The father has seen so much evil and selfishness, and baseness, but it's the boy who keeps him "carrying the fire".

God, this man is such a fabulous writer. I need to read his other books. His descriptive abilities, and way with language are so amazing, and original.

Hemingway did something great, and similar, with "The Old Man and the Sea", but McCarthy takes that simple, concise, and ultimately profound language, and style, and makes this simple, but profound story so much more uplifting. In the end.

I was so disheartened, and depressed reading this until the end. Then it all became clear. I had a good cry at the end, but I feel so blessed having read it. Mankind is not completely lost yet.

Edit:

I think I read somewhere that Mr. McCarthy found the germ for this story while on a cross country bus trip with his own son. Man. I am not a father, but I can only imagine how a Father or Mother might feel reading this.
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Re: "The Road", by Cormac McCarthy

Unread postby gampy » Sat 09 Jun 2007, 06:04:30

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('I_Like_Plants', 'I') probably ought to go to Barns'n'Borders this weekend and read it. This store is cool - they really don't care if you read books all day, they have a coffee shop and make it up on coffee and buns, and even though I really hate buying books, I do end up buying them once in a while there.


You must read this book. Please.

It is hard to read it at first, and perhaps harder as you go farther, but it is worth it in the end. What a profound treatise on Fatherhood and Love.
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Re: "The Road", by Cormac McCarthy

Unread postby kochevnik » Sun 10 Jun 2007, 16:59:42

Great writer. Great book.

McCarthy evidently has a YOUNG son - maybe even younger than the one in the book. Also having a young son, I think this is why this book was so hard to read. It's way way beyond doomer porn tho.
"People are just bastards - bastard covered bastards with bastard filling."
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Re: "The Road", by Cormac McCarthy

Unread postby I_Like_Plants » Sun 10 Jun 2007, 23:10:36

I'm glad this thread got bumped. I still need to read this thing.
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Re: "The Road", by Cormac McCarthy

Unread postby SeasonOfPain » Fri 15 Jun 2007, 19:28:49

I bought the hardcover about 6 months ago, but still haven't gotten around to reading it yet (I have a stack of books about four feet high that I want to read). Now the paperback is #13 in Amazon's bestseller list.

Anyone else find it interesting that the public loves apocalyptic fiction, but doesn't want to hear about unhappy scenarios that might actually happen? Not that this is anything new, just interesting...
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Re: "The Road", by Cormac McCarthy

Unread postby strider3700 » Fri 15 Jun 2007, 19:47:17

In general I don't think the public likes apocalyptic fiction. The road is super popular because Oprah pimped it a couple of weeks ago.
shame on us, doomed from the start
god have mercy on our dirty little hearts
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Re: "The Road", by Cormac McCarthy

Unread postby gampy » Sat 16 Jun 2007, 02:02:44

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('strider3700', 'I')n general I don't think the public likes apocalyptic fiction. The road is super popular because Oprah pimped it a couple of weeks ago.


Actually, I disagree. "The end is nigh" stories have been popular, and ubiquitous as any theme in the history of fiction.

While Oprah's pimp factor has given the book huge exposure, people still read the back jacket before buying it.

If it looks too harsh to them, they are not going to buy it.

Doomer porn or not, it's quite a read. A very good book.
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Re: "The Road", by Cormac McCarthy

Unread postby TheDude » Sat 16 Jun 2007, 08:21:21

Look at all those Jericho fans sending in hundreds of pounds of nuts to CBS. People want their doom. Oprah wants doom. Oprah gave everyone in the audience a CFL bulb recently. Lewis Black pointed out that she'd given everyone a new car the year before...people want cognitive dissonance as well.
Cogito, ergo non satis bibivi
And let me tell you something: I dig your work.
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Re: "The Road", by Cormac McCarthy

Unread postby hermit » Mon 01 Sep 2008, 15:54:05

I just finished the road. It was well written, but as uncomfortable as eating glass.

I see no value for doomers to read this book. It is neither motivational, instructional, or even escapist. That being said, I'm glad Oprah has promoted it.... I really hope it makes people think twice about all of the nuclear bombs we've been building.
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Re: "The Road", by Cormac McCarthy

Unread postby killJOY » Mon 01 Sep 2008, 16:07:46

My mother gave me this book after she had finished it for her book club.

I was very glad to get hold of it finally.

It's one of the worse pieces of crap I've ever read.

It has one tone--dismal--and it trots out every apocalyptic cliche one can think of, including the requisite toasted baby carcass.

In fact, one might call "The Road" apocalyptic swill punctuated with crappy father/son heart-to-heart sentimentality.

It simply floors me that this book was so popular. The intellectual capacity of the reading public is apparently zero.

I particularly liked the part where the daddy and boy just happened to stumble upon a fallout shelter, full of old-fashioned canned foods!

Would that they had missed this cache and died. We would have been spared the rest of the "story."
Peak oil = comet Kohoutek.
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Re: "The Road", by Cormac McCarthy

Unread postby Narz » Mon 01 Sep 2008, 16:21:29

I listened to the audiobook for awhile. I found it highly melodramatic & dull but maybe it got better, I only gave it about 45 minutes.
“Seek simplicity but distrust it”
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Re: "The Road", by Cormac McCarthy

Unread postby TheDude » Mon 01 Sep 2008, 16:33:33

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('killJOY', 'M')y mother gave me this book after she had finished it for her book club.

I was very glad to get hold of it finally.

It's one of the worse pieces of crap I've ever read.


What are some of the better pieces of crap you've read, then? :-D

Obviously your characters can't all die, unless you want the plot to take a metaphysical turn. I've read other books with much worse handling of the string of happy accidents.

He's depicting a world where barely anything grows anymore. A cliched treatment of a post-apocalypse would be a movie with people refining gasoline from a stripper well in the Australian outback, and apparently getting all of their protein from a couple of chickens and the odd can of dog food.
Cogito, ergo non satis bibivi
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Re: "The Road", by Cormac McCarthy

Unread postby PhebaAndThePilgrim » Mon 01 Sep 2008, 17:14:30

Good day from Pheba, from the farm:
I read the book. I can't use the word "like" to describe my reading experience.
I found the book necessary because it related to a subconscious fear I have about where we may be heading.
I had to lay off the doomer porn for a while.
I have been concentrating on watching my science fiction, etc.
I am curious. though;
I wonder what the film version is going to be like?
I believe it is being released the 12th of December, 2008.
Oddly enough isn't 12,12 12 the date of the end-times as postulated by the Mayan calendar?
A depressing book, and like the films, Saving Private Ryan, and "Requiem for A Dream", should only be consumed one time.
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