A Gay/campy chronicling of daily life in NYC,with individual kernels of human truth. copyright 2011 by The Raving Queen
Monday, February 12, 2018
What A Reading Expereince!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Girls, I am telling you, I never expected so much from this novel, as what I got.
Cormac McCarthy is macho to the core. But beneath lurks the soul of a poet. His masterwork, "Blood Meridian," is one of the most violent books I have ever read, yet written with a poetic lyricism that makes the distasteful bearable, in order for the reader to understand just how horrible it actually is.
Much of the same can be said for "Suttree," which I think is his best novel, next to the aforementioned. But it is so much more. It has a Faulknerian quality, and owes a lot to Charles Dickens, as this is, essentially, an American, Westernized version, of his lengthiest novel, "Our Mutual Friend." A note to any students out there, if you are looking for a topic for your as yet unwritten English Lit paper, here it is--read and write a comparison on both books.
Dickens' title is dark, referring to death, who comes to all. McCarthy's title refers to Cornelius Suttree, from a well bread Tennessee family, who chooses life as a n'er do well.
When his son dies, and wife goes to pieces, he is kicked out, and disowned by the family, he is kicked out, and lives a life of squalor, in a houseboat, among the lowlifes along the Tennessee river.
That is the plot. But the real story lies in the characters he meets along the way; everyone from itinerant drifters, like Gene Harrogate, to prostitutes. There are times when the novel seems to morph into Robert Altman's 1971 film, "McCabe and Mrs. Miller;" I could almost hear the Leonard Cohen songs in my head, as I was reading.
Both books are dense, and a challenge to read. But well worth it. "Suttree" is about half the length of Dickens' opus, but reminds me I need to reread the latter. It has been too long. But I need the Modern Library Classics edition of it, to complete my collection.
"Suttrree" is a marvelous surprise--haunting and lyrical, yet macho as hell. If someone concealed the cover from me, and I was asked who wrote this, I would have said Cormac McCarthy. No one can write this kind of story, like him.
You've got to read it, darlings!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Traveling lady, stay awhile
ReplyDeleteuntil the night is over
I'm just a station on your way
I know I'm not your lover...
ReplyDeleteAh, Leonard!
How I miss him. He
was a true artist and poet.