Cormac McCarthy (Photo by Dawn Jones, Professor Productions) |
McCarthy grew up in an Irish Catholic family in Knoxville, where his father, a Yale graduate, was a lawyer for the Tennessee Valley Authority. “Often set in the backwoods of Tennessee or the great wide open of the Old West, McCarthy’s novels took violence to a nearly hallucinogenic level as he spooled out stories of murderous bounty hunters, drug deals gone fatally wrong and life in a post-apocalyptic netherworld,” writes Steve Marble of the Los Angeles Times. “During the course of his career, he won virtually every meaningful award, including a Pulitzer Prize.”
McCarthy's books included All the Pretty Horses (1992, his breakout novel and first set in the Southwest); No Country for Old Men (2005), both adapted into movies; Child of God (1973), and Blood Meridian (2005), which "is regarded as McCarthy’s masterpiece," Marble writes. "Some critics hailed it as one of the great American novels." Singer-songwirter Jason Isbell said McCarthy had "immeasurable" influence on him and other writers.
He wasn't universally liked. “McCarthy had a strong aversion to punctuation, and often stripped his books of quotation marks, commas and hyphens,” Marble notes. “While some purists complained, many critics found his writing so seductive and self-propelled that readers would instinctively know what was a quote or when a sentence came to an end.”
from The Rural Blog https://ift.tt/f4Fawnz Cormac McCarthy, whose novels drew from the landscapes of Southern Appalachia and the Southwest, dies at 89 - Entrepreneur Generations
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