I just finished reading No Country for Old Men by Cormac McCarthy. (I have heard there is a movie out with the same name, but I have not seen it).
On the cover appears a blurb from the WaPo, probably an excerpt from their review, reading in part: "The most accessible of all his works."
Given this book's abhorrence of apostrophes in contractions and sheer refusal to use quotation marks around passages of dialog, I can only assume this means McCarthy's previous books were printed in four-point type, using yellow ink.
It was a pretty entertaining yarn, especially if you like a bleak mood and a high body count, which I do, but the affectation of improper punctuation really distracted me. If I have to struggle to read a piece of fiction for a reason like this, all it does is prevent me from losing myself in the story. I feel like the author is standing over my shoulder, saying, "Look at me! I'm writing! Aren't I clever?"
It's one thing to make mistakes on purpose when writing in the first person, a la Flowers for Algernon; it's quite another to do so when writing in the third. The narrator has the God's eye view, right? You'd think God would know something about proper punctuation.
5 comments:
I passed on 'No Country' because of bad reviews. I read 'The Road' and thought it to be the most harrowing and memorable book I've read in a decade. (Please don't make me go back down in that basement again.)
Thanks for the recommendation, Don. If I like it, too, then I'll try to remember to note that somewhere; i.e., I don't say that NCFOM was a bad book. Just an annoying rendering of a pretty good story.
God does know about proper punctuation and I'd like to believe that he punishes those who misuse apostrophes especially severely. But then I'm not sure I believe in god, so it gets kinda complicated.
In other news:
"I can only assume this means McCarthy's previous books were printed in four-point type, using yellow ink" is an extremely well-turned phrase.
So you got that going for you.
the movie version of No Country is really good as well, the rumors are true
JJ: Thanks (for the compliment).
Patrick: Thanks (for the recommendation).
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