Product Details
Author : Cormac Mccarthy
Binding : Paperback
EAN : 9780307387134
Edition : Reissue
Number of Pages : 320
Product Group : Book
Publication Date : 2007-10-09
Publisher : Vintage
Release Date : 2007-10-09
ASIN : 0307387135
Customers who bought this goods also bought.
Customer Reviews
Looking for clarity (2008-02-11)  I have to admit that I bought the book after seeing the movie in the hopes that it would bring some clarity to the ending. It did, to some degree. The first third or so of the book is very close to the movie but the characters are much better developed. The sheriff is very much the main character in the book, unlike the movie.However, at times I felt like I was reading a book by a real gun nut because of the detail in which McCarthy described the weapons and methods of killing. There are a couple of places in the book that strain the credibility of the story, not least of which is what finally becomes of the money.This is the first book by Cormac McCarthy that I have ever read. It is certainly not an uplifting tale, but it is a powerful story that is written extremely well and it does make me want to read some of his previous works. I would recommend it highly.
A contemporary Western morality tale that resonates with social relevance. (2007-11-29)  In "No Country for Old Men," Sheriff Bell expresses bewilderment about the carnage left in the wake of a drug deal that went utterly wrong.He wonders what it is to be an officer of the law, now that crime and criminals seem to have hit new depths of depravity.He says, "I ain't sure we've seen these people before. Their kind. I don't know what to do about em even. If you killed em all they'd have to build an annex on to hell."Punctuating this elegy of a story are his ruminations on goodness, the decline of polite society, and whether basic virtues like kindness and respect retain influence.Certainly, Bell is one of the dispossessed old men implied by the book's title. Incidentally, the new film by Joel and Ethan Coen is a close adaptation of McCarthy's novel. And the consensus so far is that it's a brilliant film -- in which the Coens bring their characteristic inverted sense of Americana to a contemporary western tale.It conforms tightly, but not fully, to conventions within Western stories -- both written and on film.It's a highly visual work, and the novel unfolds in linear form, deriving its force from what characters say and do.Bell's character forms part of a triangle which includes Llewlyn Moss who foolishly, but understandably, removes two million dollars from the scene of the botched deal.The other third of the triangle is Anton Chigurh, emblematic of murderous, implacable evil, from whom Moss is on the run.Chigurh is behind most of the dramatic tension, which McCarthy maintains at an almost unbearable level by also keeping readers mindful of his thematic purpose.The fullness of this purpose is so closely tied with the resolution that we are able to identify and fully appreciate it only once we've reached the story's end.It's an urgently relevant theme in today's world, and without giving anything away, it has to do with compromise at a personal and moral level.
A Apt Title (2006-08-04)  A violent introspection of how our values and country are misplaced. A long-standing County Sherriff watches senseless killings take place and elects to remain one step behind the killer(s). The Sheriff is out of step with the needs of his county, famiy and self. Although an eventual honest self assessment enables him to do what's best - no matter how late he is in coming to grips with his reality. The killers appear to come out ahead while everyone else is dead, physically and spiritually.The title is apt in that this really is No Country for Old Men.
Alas... (2005-08-30)  The long hiatus between Cities of the Plain and No Country for Old Men wasn't very fruitful. I've been a McCarthy fan for 15 years, and this last effort is very, very disapointing. Yes the prose is McCarthy, but the storyline has lost a lot to cheap expedience and a huge and unnecessary pile of bloody corpses. What saddens me the most is that the feeling of elation is gone. What a waste.
The master best novel yet! (2005-08-08)  I have read the "Border Trilogy," and "All the Pretty Horses" was my favorite, especially the horse breaking scenes and the scenes set in the Mexican Prison. BUT a lot of the time McCarthy leaves me scratching my head. Sometimes his stories go wandering off on tangents I just don't get (I sometimes fear I am just not intelligent enough to understand his point). This book however is more direct and simply laid out. A kind of modern day thriller that has so much more going on. The basic story is this: While out hunting along the Rio Grande river, Llewelyn Moss, a Texas welder, stumbles upon $2 million, and a bunch of herion ready for the street all guarded by a dead man. Ross takes the money and is soon on the run from drug dealers, assassins, and the law. The author uses the plot as way to explore good and evil, heaven and hell, right and wrong; and do these things even exist? The book also contains plenty of action and some very gory, brutal scenes, so if you are bothered by graphic violence be forwarned! The Violence, though is central to the story and the issues the author is exploring. To sum up this is an excellent thriller read with a lot more to say, than just entertain. I also recommend "Tourist in the Yucatan" another Violent thriller, set in Mexico, about a gringo on the run from people on both sides of the law, while also trying to find his missing wife.
Look for similar items by category
Related Link
Powered by Amazon Web Services + Amazon Associates.
|