02-17-2009, 08:27 PM | #11 | ||
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Fail. |
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02-17-2009, 10:15 PM | #12 | |
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I think what he's saying in your quote is that McCarthy copped out by giving their journey some personal redemption, a glimmer of a hollywood ending to apeal to the Oprah types. He suggests that McCarthy should have killed father and son off and ended with a fourish of poetic abstraction sort of like he did in Blood Meridian and Cities of the Plain. I'm not saying I agree with him.
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02-17-2009, 10:23 PM | #13 | |
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First off, I have no memory of a connection between Wood and Joseph Smith. Second, for him to have the gall to tell McCarthy how he SHOULD have ended the book, is like saying, if I were DaVinci, I would have touched up the corner of her mouth a bit with some rouge. Screw him. Or, I would like Mt. Everest better, if the peak was more symmetrical. WTF? Honestly, like Oprah readers, Wood has overthought the ending, trying to interpret it. Do you know what that means? He doesn't get it. I'm very disappointed, if this is the greatest literary critic of the last 40 odd years or so, and this is all he has to say. What a pile of doo-doo. You are going to get a lot of credit from a lot of people, if you have read the 200,000 previous important posts, and can formulate your response in the context of them, as well as the thousands of other conversations of other works. I will grant that someone like Wood is infinitely more capable of doing this--of placing this book in the context of other books and conversations. But in the sense of taking this work, and examining it in terms of the human experience, in and by itself, he fails. If this book is truly important, this review is not among those reviews that will be remembered as important. |
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02-17-2009, 11:33 PM | #14 |
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Or maybe just killed the son off and ended with the father, the last man, raging at Jehova in some fashion.
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Interrupt all you like. We're involved in a complicated story here, and not everything is quite what it seems to be. —Paul Auster |
02-17-2009, 11:39 PM | #15 | |
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or how about being roasted alive on a spit. blah, blah, blah. What if this, what if that. Are we going to rewrite Frost's poetry next? I don't know if I've ever read a book, that was so technically adept and also so free of artifice. If you want to make the argument that the ending was artifice, that they were false steps, then make that argument. But I feel pretty safe saying that the argument will not hold. The work speaks for itself. |
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02-17-2009, 11:41 PM | #16 | |
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Wood calls himself an atheist nostalgic for belief. He was raised in a fundamentalist protestant household. He has said he is not a fan of American male writers (Wood is English) who have opaque, taciturn male heros. He cites Hemingway as the chief offender, but has noted this in McCarthy's writing as well. McCarthy has said that he can't take a novel seriously that doesn't deal with the problem of death. That a novel absent death is not worthy of consideration. I don't think he and Wood share a common vision of what makes a great novel but Wood does grudgingly call him a brilliant novelist at times. (Wood's wife is a well known novelist and I don't think her novels tackle death; they deal with New York high society.) Wood hated no Country For Old Men. Here's his review of it along with reprisal of McCarthy's career in a New Yorker article. Clearly there's huge admiration mixed with some annoyance here. http://www.newyorker.com/archive/200...0725crbo_books I too was a little surprised the first time I read the review of The Road when right at the end he called it a "magnificent novel." Wood, by the way, is hard on most everyone he reviews to some extent.
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Interrupt all you like. We're involved in a complicated story here, and not everything is quite what it seems to be. —Paul Auster Last edited by SeattleUte; 02-17-2009 at 11:43 PM. |
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02-17-2009, 11:44 PM | #17 |
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Ok, now you are asking me to appreciate an effete English literary critic who doesn't like HEMINGWAY!!!!!!
How can someone not like Hemingway? That's the end of the conversation right there. |
02-17-2009, 11:46 PM | #18 | |
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02-17-2009, 11:47 PM | #19 |
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I don't think he dislikes Hemingway. Just this one way in which he's often imitated. I think he sees it as an easy way out.
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02-18-2009, 12:26 AM | #20 |
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All I have read is "Horses" which I thought was good to very good, but nothing to jump up and down about. The second book of the trilogy, I have said before, I couldn't finish. His temptation to wax philosophical at the expense of bringing the reader with him, got the best of him, and I could not continue on that journey.
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