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« #30 - Dance of the Suitors, by J.M. Villaverde | Main | #32 - The Fiend in Human, by John Maclachlan Gray » #31 - No Country for Old Men, by Cormac McCarthy
What can I say about this book that hasn't been said a million times in the last six months, or however long it's been since the Coen brothers released their masterful interpretation? I like McCarthy's prose style; it's clean and slow and has a mystical feel to it, like Faulkner with a smaller vocabulary, and his dialogue has that strange southern dignity, that curious blend of ignorance and sophistication that you don't find anywhere else in the English speaking world, or at least that you don't find written down. In some ways I'm reminded of Ian Fleming's prose, though I know that's a comparison that a lot of people won't understand. Both writers eschew (Bob Harris be damned) extraneous detail or overt emotional exploration, but McCarthy's world feels spartan, while Fleming's seems decadent. It's a conundrum, and I suppose if I sat down with the works of both men I could explain exactly what constructions and turns of phrase created the difference, but that's not really what I do here. Suffice it to say that the book and the movie were more or less equally good, and often for the same reasons, and that I will be enjoying more of McCarthy's work in the future. Next: The Fiend in Human, by John Maclachlan Gray. Posted by August on 04.13.08 at 12:25 PM | Comments (0) CommentsPost a comment
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