A roadmap to the dark and mythic topography of Mc Carthy’s fiction
Named by Harold Bloom as one of the most significant American novelists of our time, Cormac Mc Carthy has been honored with the National Book Award and the National Book Critics Circle Award for All the Pretty Horses, the James Tait Black Memorial Prize and the Pulitzer Prize for The Road, and the coveted Mac Arthur Fellowship. Steven Frye offers a comprehensive treatment of Mc Carthy’s fiction to date, dealing with the author’s aesthetic and thematic concerns, his philosophical and religious influences, and his participation in Western literary traditions.
Frye provides extensive readings of each novel, charting the trajectory of Mc Carthy’s development as a writer who invigorates literary culture both past and present through a blend of participation, influence, and aesthetic transformation. Understanding Cormac Mc Carthy explores the early works of the Tennessee period in the context of the ‘romance’ genre, the southern gothic and grotesque, as well as the carnivalesque. A chapter is devoted to Blood Meridian, a novel that marks Mc Carthy’s transition to the West and his full recognition as a major force in American letters. In the final two chapters, Frye explores Mc Carthy’s Border Trilogy and his later works— specifically No Country for Old Men and The Road—addressing the manner in which Mc Carthy’s preoccupation with violence and human depravity exists alongside a perpetual search for meaning, purpose, and value.
Frye provides scholars, students, and general readers alike with a clearly argued foundational examination of Mc Carthy’s novels in their historical and literary contexts as an ideal roadmap illuminating the author’s work as it charts the dark and mythic topography of the American frontier.
Despre autor
Steven Frye is a professor of American literature at California State University, Bakersfield. He is the author of Historiography and Narrative Design in the American Romance: A Study of Four Authors, editor of Critical Insights: Poe’s Tales, associate editor of ALN: The American Literary Naturalism Newsletter, and author of numerous essays on Cormac Mc Carthy and other novelists of the American romance tradition.