Loading...
Thumbnail Image
Item

Mystique, minimalism and cataclysm : Cormac McCarthy’s fiction was a dark counter-narrative to American optimism

Giles, Paul
Citations
Altmetric:
Abstract
[Extract] It is testimony to Cormac McCarthy’s reputation as a writer of dark and violent fictions that his publishers should explicitly have stated in their press release on Tuesday that his death was due to “natural causes”. Normally the passing of a famous author at the age of 89 might be regarded as part of the natural cycle of things, but McCarthy’s frequent depictions of gruesome murder plots, and the judicious discussion of suicide in his most recent novel Stella Maris, perhaps induced Penguin Random House to emphasise how the author made his exit in a more conventional manner, garlanded by age and honours. Given his own troubled personal history with alcohol, divorces and economic hardship during the early part of his career, such a consummation was never an entirely safe bet. Nevertheless, McCarthy eventually saw it through and he ended up a major American fiction writer, albeit a complex and often controversial figure whose works were typically unsettling.
Keywords
Date
2023-06-14
Type
Other
Journal
The Conversation
Book
Volume
Issue
Page Range
Article Number
ACU Department
Institute for Humanities and Social Sciences
Faculty of Education and Arts