a novel by Cormac McCarthy, was the 2007 winner of the Pulitzer Prize.I've actually come to a stop and I can't finish the final scene just yet. I'm still trying to come to terms with I've read, trying to digest where it's taken me.Basically, my psyche is shot. My mind is blown. This book is just devastating.... I feel destroyed. I've been walking around in a daze all day. I've never read a book more profound, or personally intense. Background: McCarthy has been compared to William Faulkner. The Road has been hailed as masterpiece, as the "most important book of the past 25 years". The movie is scheduled for a 2009 theatrical release. It will give McCarthy's other notable book-turned-movie, "No Country for Old Men" a serious run for the money.
11/24/2008 5:20:39 PM
i dunno about comparing him to faulknerbut it's good shit
11/24/2008 5:24:44 PM
Might have to pick this up.Should I still try and read "No Country for Old Men" even though I've already seen the movie?
11/24/2008 5:26:32 PM
yea I want to read this
11/24/2008 5:36:26 PM
^^^ well, he uses many of the same literary devices as Faulkner, had the same editor as Faulkner for 25 years, and every third reviewer of his books makes some comparison -- whether good or bad -- to Faulkner. I think that's pretty much covers the state of "being compared to" .... of course, you could maybe quit posting on the interwebs and start writing for the New York Times Review of Books and set everyone straight.^^ eh, i dont know. i havent read it yet. maybe i will someday. But I think you should read this one right now.at the risk of trivializing the magnitude of the book, here are 6 movie stills to give you an idea of the setting.--http://www.usatoday.com/life/gallery/2008/l080807_theroad/flash.htm?[Edited on November 24, 2008 at 5:53 PM. Reason : ]
11/24/2008 5:46:24 PM
I read it earlier this year.Stark. Gripping. Harrowing. But somewhat implausible. There is one part in particular that I thought was just too ridiculolous.
11/24/2008 5:53:07 PM
i think i know what part you mean. the one instance where he's a really good shot with an improbable weapon? I dont think it distracts at all from the reality or the metaphysical truth of the story.PM sent to not engage in spoilers.
11/24/2008 5:56:43 PM
11/24/2008 6:12:10 PM
yeah, I can believe that. I just hope they're able to capture the full philosophical/moral imperative of "The Road" in the movie. They have to, otherwise it's just another post-apocalyptic horror flick.
11/24/2008 6:15:16 PM
^^ Wasn't that movie based on an anti-capitalism rant called Oil!Shit, I was thinking of "There Will Be Blood"[Edited on November 24, 2008 at 6:16 PM. Reason : 2]
11/24/2008 6:16:09 PM
11/24/2008 6:29:54 PM
i said he "has been compared to". you can't say that his isn't, because obviously he is "compared to". Now for the sake of discussion, I'll agree with you that he's not "as great as" Faulkner.Let's carry on, shall we?
11/24/2008 6:37:07 PM
11/24/2008 6:42:23 PM
No.I refuse.
11/24/2008 6:43:38 PM
11/24/2008 7:02:55 PM
okay. my bad. i need to leave TSB out of Entertainment.back to the book.I learned a lot of new words. the one that sticks with me most is "claggy"
11/24/2008 7:11:29 PM
11/24/2008 7:52:26 PM
im hesitating to read the ending, still. i've about 10 pages left. i want to dwell (wallow?) in the heaviness of the climax.
11/24/2008 8:43:47 PM
i started reading this book this summer but couldn't really get very far into it. i think maybe it's because i started reading it right after blindness and they have the same feel to them. maybe i just couldnt handle two depressing books back to back.
11/24/2008 11:47:33 PM
actually i only had 2 pages left to read. so, i finished it. it was a good book.FTR, i'm recovered now. but, man, i really was depressed for the whole damn day.
11/25/2008 10:30:15 AM
this movie would be boring as shit
11/25/2008 12:44:31 PM
how so?
11/25/2008 1:51:09 PM
So my interest has been piqued. Would someone mind writing a brief synopsis of the story?
11/25/2008 2:36:55 PM
i'm wondering what part omar (from the wire) is going to play in the movie
11/25/2008 2:40:47 PM
11/25/2008 2:46:28 PM
Sounds pretty interesting. I think I may pick it up when I'm done reading my current book.
11/25/2008 2:57:20 PM
the plot would make a boring movie, trueand as far as the moral message goes... I don't think there was a clear oneI mean, what would it be? "Life really sucks, but I'm going to keep going regardless of the fact that it will end in death eventually*"?[Edited on November 25, 2008 at 6:22 PM. Reason : *not talking plot points, but just in the post-apocalyptic landscape in general]
11/25/2008 6:21:43 PM
no, you're not even close. its abstract, not concrete. you can't beat a metaphysical message out of it.anyhow... how are post-apocalyptic movies "boring"? some of the most ridiculously-popular box office smashes have been in the post-apocalyptic genre.obviously, popular opinion and financial success doesn't necessarily mean they're good movies, and certainly the genre may not appeal to you, personally ... but "boring" ? that's hardly a word to describe a horror/action flick, whether it has a philosophical message or not.
11/25/2008 7:47:14 PM
11/25/2008 9:03:01 PM
God damn you're an insufferable film-and-literature snob.
11/25/2008 9:33:14 PM
^ truebut I agree with her that it would be boring, this should be left a book
11/25/2008 9:36:27 PM
Hollywood would spice that shit up with some sex, zombies and maybe even a dragon or 2.
11/25/2008 9:41:21 PM
^^^ How? It's a great book, I just don't see it being a good movie. It's snobby of me to say so?[Edited on November 25, 2008 at 9:52 PM. Reason : omg, aimorris must be a snob too!]
11/25/2008 9:47:12 PM
I tried to read it, still sitting on my shelf. Couldn't get into it and never made it past the 50 page mark.
11/25/2008 10:13:05 PM
I liked it, but it wasnt super earth shattering like the OP
11/25/2008 10:29:30 PM
i'm sorry some of you folks didnt find the book very exciting.here's some others who did
11/25/2008 11:52:18 PM
I read the thing in its entirity in the last 24 hours. I thought it was pretty much as joe_schmoe advertised.***I don't think anything I'm about to say qualifies as a spoiler, but if you're paranoid or picky about such things, move along.***I'm ambivalent about the prospects for the film. I think that taking an appropriate mix of flashbacks, action, and travel, they could probably keep a good pace and still cover everything. I think they're on the right track from what I've read about the flashbacks being expanded in the movie.At the same time, it'd have to be a careful balance, because let's face it -- most of the book is about these guys walking around. And while it's exciting for us in the book when they find something of necessity, I don't see many audiences being enthralled that their heroes have found a can of pears.
11/26/2008 4:21:00 PM
^^ CRITICS AGREE WITH ME, THEREFORE I'M RIGHT!Seriously, what you're doing is the worst kind of snobbery.Additionally, many of those reviews mention nothing of excitement, and I don't think anyone here has said that the book is bad. ]
11/26/2008 4:24:42 PM
i guess i can see why you think it might be snobbery -- except that the critical praise is overwhelming, of the highest level, and across the entire spectrum of reviewers. personally, i found the book by accident at the grocery store. i recognized the author's name and saw that it won the Pulitzer Prize, but otherwise knew nothing about it. it was only after the book had left me absolutely reeling with shock and awe, that i looked up the reviews.anyhow, I'm sorry you weren't impressed. I guess it isn't for everyone.
11/26/2008 4:47:43 PM
Why are Soap Box regulars so bad at posting in the Entertainment section?Next thing you know hooksaw's gonna bust up in here with some sales numbers trying prove or disprove the book's worth.
11/26/2008 5:51:30 PM
^^ the critical praise for his other works is also ubiquitousbut I liked some of his other works better than this onenot that big of a deal, really
11/26/2008 5:55:28 PM
11/26/2008 5:58:09 PM
come on, man, dont be a retard. when Ebert said Van Helsing was great, he was off all by his lonesome looking like a fool. Obviously, extracting one singular review and holding it up as the be-all-end-all Word of God would be ignorant. Holding up a consensus of 40-some nationally respected reviewers, however, is quite another matter.Simple fact is, the book is awesome. It's being regarded as one of the most important books in the past 25 years. And I don't care that you've a raging hardon for Faulkner, but the fact is McCarthy is in the same league. Cry all you want, but he IS being compared to him. Often favorably, sometimes critically. But compared, he is.another fact is, the movie is in post-production right now, and it's going to be compared to the Coen Brothers' adaptation of No Country for Old Men. Now this movie may wind up being a mediocre flop, or it may be a contender for a number of Academy Awards. And the odds are on the latter, no matter how much a couple of you literary/film snobs want to sniff about "boring" and whatnot.[Edited on November 26, 2008 at 6:47 PM. Reason : ]
11/26/2008 6:44:02 PM
11/26/2008 7:02:30 PM
i feel like i'm being tag-teamed here.
11/26/2008 7:15:47 PM
That's what happens when you argue the point that you're trying to argue.
11/26/2008 7:37:28 PM
yeah, calm down dude, its good little book, but its no Tommyknockers or The Sum of All Fears
11/26/2008 7:53:07 PM
aw hell, Stephen King and Tom Clancyno wonder you weren't that impressed.carry on.[Edited on November 26, 2008 at 8:19 PM. Reason : ]
11/26/2008 8:12:29 PM
I did read this year's Pulitzer winner (The Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao) the way through though. It was very easy to get into and the best book I've read all year.[Edited on November 26, 2008 at 10:47 PM. Reason : .]
11/26/2008 10:46:46 PM
set 'em up
11/26/2008 11:30:06 PM