Cormac Mccarthy's The Road

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I. McCarthy, Cormac. The Road. New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 2006. Print.

II. The Road starts with a man and his son trekking through a post-apocalyptic landscape after an unexplained event has transpired. The endgame according to the father is to head southeast toward the coast. His belief is that the two will be safe there. The father-son duo encounters many instances of hardship including: cannibalistic looters, a seemingly harmless house holding human livestock, and the more prevalent threat of hypothermia and starvation. When they finally get to the coast, it is not what they expected, but they stay for a few days. Finally, the man and his son get to a pine forest. Suffering from a worsening respiratory infection, the man decides he can …show more content…

Cormac McCarthy puts his writing ability on full display in The Road. It showcases his one great strength: dark, pessimistic writing. If science fiction and post-apocalyptic settings is your thing, then you’ll love this book. However, if you’re looking for something happy and cheerful with a dash of hope, then sit this one out. There is little hope to be had in The Road, but if you look past the darkness and look for the light, you won’t be disappointed. The characters complement each other perfectly; the man being the voice of reason void of any sense of compassion for anyone other than his son, and the boy’s immense amount of compassion for anyone in need. It is also apparent that the man is only alive because of the boy, accurately hypothesized by the woman the night before she committed suicide saying “you won’t survive for yourself”. She goes on to say that the quintessential loner would be “well advised to cobble together some passable ghost.” This ghost that the woman is talking about is the boy. The loner would then “breathe it into being and coax it along with words of love, giving it every “phantom crumb” and sheltering it from “harm with your body.” This is exactly how the man looks after the boy, never directly answering the frequently asked question of “Are we going to die?” The man appears to break his promise of never sending the boy “into the darkness alone”, but does he really? After all this time on The Road, the man teaches the boy that in an environment like this, there is no such thing as compassion, but after he is found by the other family, maybe compassion could be

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