Choices in The Road by Cormac Mcarthy

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The Road, a thrilling novel about a post-apocalyptic world, demonstrates a great understanding of the reasoning behind the choices humans make. While living a normal life with his wife and child, some unknown disaster occurs leaving the world in ruins and a father caring for his son by himself. He continues to raise his son, facing difficult decisions everyday, but inclusively decides to continue living. Also after discovering a bunker full of nonperishable foods, the father makes the tough decision to leave. Finally, the father choices to take a robber’s clothes; which presumably leads to the thief’s death. However, the son states his disagreement with his father’s choice leading to a change of heart. The incredibly difficult choices the father makes throughout the novel demonstrates his commitment to a strong relationship between him and his son.
The first difficult choice the reader learns about, comes from a flashback about one-fifth of the way through the story. The father must choose whether he desires to live with his son or to follow his wife’s actions and commit suicide. The father chooses to live with his son in this new wasteland of a world; even though his wife chose the simpler route, to end her life. With only each other, the two must learn to survive in this new wasteland. As stated in a review of the novel by Ms. Lana Beckwith, “All these two people have left is each other, and so begins a story of tenacity, sacrifice and the redemptive power of love” (20). Everyday the boy and his father struggle to survive and at one point the boy states, I wish I was with mom, and his father interprets this statement as a desire to die. They continue struggling to survive until; finally they find a “safe haven”.
This “safe hav...

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...er probably never would have survived. The two characters compliment each other because the boy “carries the fire” acting as a Messiah-like figure, seeing the good in everyone and everything. The father acts more as a realist, living in constant fear. The father’s decisions: leaving the bunker, continuing with life, and telling the boy the robber was going to die anyways, comes from more of the realistic point-of-view; whereas, the boy views everyone as genuinely good, like wanting to give the thief his clothes back. The father’s choices reflect his love towards his son, and even though he suffers immensely throughout the novel, his relationship with his son remains unbreakable.

Works Cited

Beckwith, Lana. “HarperCollins’ corporate communications assistant on a modern post-apocalyptic classic.” The Bookseller 15 May 2009: 20. Gale Power Search. Web. 5 Mar. 2014.

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