| No Country for Old Men | |
| Author | Cormac McCarthy |
|---|---|
| Country | United States |
| Language | English |
| Genre(s) | Thriller novel |
| Publisher | Alfred A. Knopf |
| Publication date | July 19, 2005 |
| Media type | Print (Hardback & Paperback) |
| Pages | 320 pp (hardback edition) |
| ISBN | ISBN 0-375-40677-8 (hardback edition) |
| OCLC | 57352812 |
No Country for Old Men is a 2005 novel by American author Cormac McCarthy. Set along the United States–Mexico border in 1980, the story concerns an illicit drug deal gone wrong in a remote desert location. The title comes from the poem "Sailing to Byzantium" by William Butler Yeats. In 2007 a film adaptation was released, winning four Academy Awards, including Best Picture.
Contents |
The plot involves a host of other characters of lesser importance, including other sheriffs, deputies, and other officials, as well as criminals and criminal leaders.
The plot follows the interweaving paths of the three central characters (Llewelyn Moss, Anton Chigurh, and Ed Tom Bell) set in motion by events related to a drug deal gone bad near the Mexican-American border in southwest Texas in Terrell County.
While Llewelyn Moss is hunting antelope, he stumbles across the aftermath of a drug-related gun battle which has left everyone dead except a single badly-wounded Mexican. Moss finds a truck full of heroin and a satchel with $2.4 million in cash. Leaving the Mexican alive, he takes the money, which ignites a hunt for him that stretches for most of the remaining novel. He sends his wife, Carla Jean Moss, to her mother while he leaves his home with the money.
Sheriff Ed Tom Bell investigates the drug crime while trying to protect Moss and his young wife with the aid of other law enforcement. The sheriff is haunted by his actions in World War II, for which he received a Bronze Star. Now in his late 50s, Bell has spent most of his life attempting to make up for the incident when he was a 21-year-old soldier. He makes it his quest to resolve the case and save Moss.
Complicating things is the arrival of Anton Chigurh, a hitman hired to recover the money. Chigurh uses a captive bolt pistol (called a "cattlegun" in the text) to kill many of his victims and to destroy several cylinder locks in order to open doors. He also wields a silenced shotgun.
In one of his final murders described in the book, he gives a long speech about causality and fate to his victim.
Carson Wells, a rival hitman and ex-partner of Chigurh, is also on the trail of the money.
McCarthy tells the story in two voices. The bulk of the book is presented in third person, but this is interspersed with first person reminiscences from Sheriff Bell. The reliance on dialogue and the sketchbook revelation of plot details lend a mystical air to the work. For example:
…when you encounter certain things in the world, the evidence for certain things, you realize that you have come upon something that you may not very well be equal to… When you've said that it's real and not just in your head, I'm not all that sure what it is you have said.
In the final paragraph of the novel, Ed Tom Bell refers to a dream in which his father rides past him in the night carrying fire of moonlight color in a horn. This same theme of 'carrying the fire' plays a large part in McCarthy's later novel, The Road.[1]. This theme also recalls the Promethean epilogue of Blood Meridian, in which a lone man advances across the countryside "striking the fire out of the rock which God has put there."
William J. Cobb, in a review published in the Houston Chronicle (July 15, 2005), characterizes McCarthy as "our greatest living writer" and describes the book as "a heated story that brands the reader's mind as if seared by a knife heated upon campfire flames."[2] On the other hand, in the July 24, 2005, issue of The New York Times Book Review, the critic and fiction writer Walter Kirn suggests that the novel's plot is "sinister high hokum", but writes admiringly of the prose, describing the author as "a whiz with the joystick, a master-level gamer who changes screens and situations every few pages."[3]
Metacritic reported that the novel received generally favorable reviews from critics, with an average score of 66 out of 100 based on 29 reviews.[4]
A film adaptation by Joel and Ethan Coen was released in 2007 to critical acclaim. The film won two Golden Globe awards, three BAFTA awards and four Academy Awards:
|
||||||||||||||
No comments have been added.