SPOILERS AHEAD
It was also one of the saddest books I have read. The author never flinched away from making things harder and harder for the Man and Boy. Never giving them a break, injuring them, throwing evil their way, all one after the other. But did this make the story any less enjoyable? To put it simply, no. I can see how it may deter some readers, but it felt like the perfect way to write the story. The constant pain and trouble made the story of an apocalyptic world feel real, painfully real. I was able to empathise with the characters when they are sick, starving, or running from cannibals. And when the Man dies, leaving the boy alone in a world where being alone means death, I felt the pain of his loss. The emptiness and sadness he must have felt, and the true feeling of helplessness were expressed perfectly by McCarthy.
So a question that can be asked now is, was the book AP English worthy? And I would answer yes. The novel offers a fresh and original perspective on the post-apocalyptic genre. It isn't and outlandish and colorful action novel full of loud and impossible characters. It was a novel that gave an unflinching view at the downfall of mankind and the small flame of hope left in it. Characters are minimal and perfectly impersonal. Nameless travelers that feel lost and unknown as much to the reader as to themselves. The lack of names, doesn't distract readers from their thoughts and actions and creates a sense of intense observation while reading. I have previously stated the author creates a uniques stream of consciousness that makes the story feel like it is in real time and everything that happens to them plausible and random.
AP English students should read The Road to better understand different authors writing styles. A new analysis of character that doesn't use planted information and names but instead an observation of their actions and thoughts. It offers a fresh new piece to a somewhat stale selection of novels that seem all too familiar to each other. The brevity of the novel makes it a quick read, but also a new challenge to absorb the limited information that a longer novel would offer.
I thoroughly enjoyed my time on The Road. The story and images it offered will stay in my head for a while and I will remember it as a truly different type of novel. Cormac Mccarthy dragged me on a grueling journey through a hellish America, and crushed my heart in the end. I appreciate the complex simplicity he created in his world and it stands as one the most eccentric, depressing, and beautiful novels I have read.

I understand that this book is very depressing, but why? Why did the author give no relief to the Man and the Boy? Obviously it wasn't like a happy, feel good story but were there little happy things? Maybe they could have suggested something about what the author finds morally correct. Also, did something happen in real life that was similar to the events that took place in this novel?
ReplyDeleteThanks
Love Owen
Your point on The Road's writing style coining it AP worthy was an interesting one. While I didn't argue for its validity as an AP novel I can definitely see and appreciate your point. It's kinda amazing how McCarthy can draw so much emotion and pain from his audience for two characters that do not even have names.
ReplyDeleteI did not view this book as being quite this sad. I thought that the style of writing kind of glossed over the death at the end to the point that I was not struck emotionally, and I did not connect with the characters enough to feel that sad for them along the entire way. Why is it that you connected with these characters so much?
ReplyDelete