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  A picture named MacchiatoPortrait.jpg Perils of Caffeine in the Evening
Ill-advised insomniac ruminations.
Last updated:
11/4/2005; 1:31:20 AM


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Monday, October 10, 2005

Well, I promised Dick and Kathy that I would expand on Joyce Carol Oates' review of Cormac McCarthy's latest book but, really, I've read so little McCarthy that I have nothing worthwhile to add.  I sort of feel like this one time I signed up to sing Frankie Avalon's "Venus" for some grade school pageant.  Then, a few days before the performance, I cued up the 45, stood in front of a mirror and realized there was no way in hell I was going to sing that song in front of anyone.  I ended up playing Twinkle, Twinkle Little Star on my ocarina/tonette, and badly.  Mrs. McGuffin, the music teacher, was not amused, but then she never was.

Anyway, here's the skinny on the review.  First of all, I didn't realize McCarthy had a 4-novel Tennessee period after attending, then dropping out of, University of Tennessee:

the dreamlike opacity of Faulkner's prose pervades The Orchard Keeper (1965)and Outer Dark (1968).  These are slow-moving novels in which backcountry natives drift like somnambulists in tragic/farcical dramas

Blood Meridian (1985) was his fifth novel, and

marks the author's reinvention of himself as a writer of the West: a visionary of vast, inhuman distances ... (and) is the author's most challenging work of fiction.

...Admirers of Blood Meridian invariably dislike and disparage McCarthy's "accessible" best-selling Border Trilogy as if these novels were a betrayal of the solemn rites of macho sadism and impacted fury of Blood Meridian, for which the ideal cover art would be a Hieronymus Bosch rendering of some scenes of Zane Grey.

So, that's the crux of the "fault line" I described in the previous post.  Looks like I'm committed, now, to finishing the Trilogy and Blood Meridian to satisfy the solemn rites of macho faux-literary blogging.

Toward the end of the article, Oates gets around to commenting on the book she's reviewing, No Country For Old Men.  It's set in contemporary Texas instead of the dying frontier of the Border Trilogy, and "reads like a prose film by Quentin Tarantino."

Shorn of the brooding lyricism and poetic descriptive passages that have become McCarthy's signature style, No Country For Old Men is a variant of one of the oldest of formula suspense tales: a man discovers a treasure and unwisely decides to take it and run, bringing upon himself and others a string of calamities...

So, there you have it.  This proves nothing about my literary self except that I can type while reclined on a Hilton hotel bed.  I mean, they put 5 pillows and an upholstered bolster on this sucker for purposes that are lost on me.  I'm supposed to be the West Coaster visiting flyover country.  Wonder if I could get them to take two of them back and install a trapeze.  Just so they'd put it on the secret part of my HHonors profile for other hoteliers to ponder when I make a reservation.


9:15:16 PM    Speak to me! []  TrackBack  []

Off to Milwaukee again today.  7:00 am flight from Seatac meant my shuttle arrived at 4:30, which meant that I got up at 3:30 to finish packing after being up til close to 1:00.  The shuttle company errs on the side of caution, so I was at the airport before the gate agents opened their kiosks.  It was kind of strange to stand in front of the checkin monitors and watch the Windows 2000 logos flash on them as they booted up for their day's work.  You forget that the myriad devices in your life are made of the same mortal clay as your trusty laptop.

I caught an hour or so of sleep on the flight to Minneapolis - I find it's possible for me when I have a window seat and can prop my head against the window or fuselage.  Later, I perused the latest New York Review of Books, which hit the house on Friday and I whisked away from Mrs. Perils' literery clutches.  There are some advantages to being up and out the door while the rest of the house is asleep.  I've been using plane time lately to read (I'm going to hate it when cell phone and email service inevitably invades that remarkable lozenge of time in the air), and a couple of hours spent with the NYRB is always such a learning experience.  Each issue is a series of kaleidoscopic peepholes into books and culture.  Yesterday, for instance, I read from the current issue:

  • A review of Cormac McCarthy's latest book by Joyce Carol Oates.  I've often liked her reviews, but, considering how prolific she is, I'm ashamed to say I've never read one of her works.  It seems she publishes a full-length novel every other month.  As is customary with NYRB reviews, this one ranged far from the book in question - there was a nice biographical sketch, a discussion of the apparent fault line between Blood Meridian and the Border Trilogy, from which sprang All The Pretty Horses.  (It seems some view Blood Meridian as great writing and the Border Trilogy as popularized pandering.  I've only read Horses, and seen the Matt Damon/Penelope Cruz movie).
  • A review of Joan Didion's latest, TheYear Of Magical Thinking, a non-fiction sort of journal dealing with the year after her husband, novelist John Gregory Dunne, pitched over dead as they sat down to dinner, a year during which her daughter also died.  I read a lot of Didion in the 70s - her "New Journalism" works The White Album and Slouching Towards Bethlehem, plus a couple of her novels, but I wasn't compelled to follow her into Salvador or her other work in the 80s, and lost touch.  It's interesting to be reacquainted, and be informed of your youthful misapprehensions of an author's work.
  • Another reviewer took on two books about the evolution/creationism debate that crystallized many of the political and intellectual issues surrounding it. 

All of that in 2 - 3 hours.  I still have articles from the same issue on judge Roberts, Richard Feynman, E. L Doctorow and the Five Books of Moses to peruse over the week and on the way home.  I think it's going to be a good week.


5:36:37 AM    Speak to me! []  TrackBack  []



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