|
|
The Green Manalishi
Posted by Ali-G (Ottawa, Canada) on 8 January 2007 in People & Portrait.
2nd Book Finished in 2007: The Road - Cormac McCarthy
Set in a post-apocalyptic blight of gray skies that drizzle ash, a world in which all matter of wildlife is extinct, starvation is not only prevalent but nearly all-encompassing, and marauding bands of cannibals roam the environment with pieces of human flesh stuck between their teeth.
Violence, in McCarthy's postapocalyptic tour de force, has been visited worldwide in the form of a "long shear of light and then a series of low concussions" that leaves cities and forests burned, birds and fish dead and the earth shrouded in gray clouds of ash. In this landscape, an unnamed man and his young son journey down a road to get to the sea. (The man's wife, who gave birth to the boy after calamity struck, has killed herself.) They carry blankets and scavenged food in a shopping cart, and the man is armed with a revolver loaded with his last two bullets. Beyond the ever-present possibility of starvation lies the threat of roving bands of cannibalistic thugs. The man assures the boy that the two of them are "good guys," but from the way his father treats other stray survivors the boy sees that his father has turned into an amoral survivalist, tenuously attached to the morality of the past by his fierce love for his son. McCarthy establishes himself here as the closest thing in American literature to an Old Testament prophet, trolling the blackest registers of human emotion to create a haunting and grim novel about civilization's slow death after the power goes out. - Publishers Weekly
Third book by McCarthy that I have read and although they are bleak, he is a very powerful writer - I don't think he'll ever be Oprah's "The Pick of the Month" - but thats ok. Not all modern fiction has to be coming of age stories set in some far off land where the men are dark and the civil wars exotic.
|
Pentax Optio S40 1/125 second F/4.8 ISO 50 18 mm
krakow poland
|