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Author - Cormac McCarthy ... [Goo?] [Posters]This Paperback Book item from Vintage was reviewed on 3-Nov-2008. Search ISBN:0679728740 offer from Abebooks or used books from Alibris. Child of God Reference Book. Classifications : General AAS Qualifying Textbooks Custom Stores Specialty Stores Books McCarthy, Cormac ( M ) Authors, A-Z Literature & Fiction Subjects Books General AAS United States World Literature Literature & Fi . Click the following link to view the cover of Child of God. Related topics: General AAS. Custom Stores. Specialty Stores. Books. McCarthy, Cormac. ( M ). Authors, A-Z. Subjects. Books. General AAS. requestid: 83798684-8b8a-4be4-b001-9f60866558f2requestprocessingtime: 0.1041840000000000 salesrank: 11900 numberofitems: 1 packagedimensions: 6079648526 1) Paperback Book Child of God by Vintage. A waste of beautiful prose and dialog. Disturbing for the sake of disturbing. Lacking any of the emotion that has made the disturbance in McCarthy´s other novels lead to insight and in many cases, redemption.
2) Paperback Book Child of God by Vintage. If you are feeling good about anything do not read this book...but if you have had some hard times and like beautiful writing..go ahead.. The main character in this book is in such a terrible mess and always goes the wrong way..the book will make your life seem like a piece of cake. Not for youth , not for the shy and not for me.¤ 3) Paperback Book Child of God by Vintage. All of McCarthy´s writing is at times disturbing, but this book is perhaps the most twisted of the six I have read. The main character is a Tennessee hermit, Lester Ballard, similar to though less refined than McCarthy´s Cornelius Suttree. In the beginning of the book, Ballard is evicted from his land and takes up residence in an abandoned house in the woods, then later in a cave. He roams the woods like a specter, hunting rifle under his arm, scavenging for discarded items he can use in his home. During one of these wanderings, he comes across a dead man and woman in a parked car. He carries the woman´s body back to his home and keep her for carnal purposes. CHILD OF GOD is probably the most unsettling book I´ve read since A.M. Homes´ The End of Alice. Part of what makes the book so difficult to read is that McCarthy´s writing, like Homes´, is so strong. It legitimizes the depravity of the story in a way that other writers couldn´t. The book never feels shocking for the sake of shock. And although there are no truly likable characters in the book, Ballard is certainly memorable. If there is a theme, it is that societies create their own own depravity when they cast out and neglect their citizens. As McCarthy says when he introduces us to Ballard, we are all born children of God.¤ 4) Paperback Book Child of God by Vintage. I love horror of any kind; novels, short stories, movies, you name it. Being from Tennessee, I´m especially drawn to "rural legends" about backwoods boogie men that you often wonder are or aren´t lurking somewhere off in the woods beyond your back doorstep.
5) Paperback Book Child of God by Vintage. If you found the minimal, bleak, tone-poem style and sometimes-horrific subject matter of The Road to your liking, then you can do no better than to turn to this early McCarthy tale, written in 1973.
6) Paperback Book Child of God by Vintage. In this taut, chilling novel, Lester Ballard--a violent, dispossessed man falsely accused of rape--haunts the hill country of East Tennessee when he is released from jail. While telling his story, Cormac McCarthy depicts the most sordid aspects of life with dignity, humor, and characteristic lyrical brilliance.¤ 7) Paperback Book Child of God by Vintage. "Scuttling down the mountain with the thing on his back he looked like a man beset by some ghast succubus, the dead girl riding him with legs bowed akimbo like a monstrous frog." Child of God must be the most sympathetic portrayal of necrophilia in all of literature. The hero, Lester Ballard, is expelled from his human family and ends up living in underground caves, which he peoples with his trophies: giant stuffed animals won in carnival shooting galleries and the decomposing corpses of his victims. Cormac McCarthy´s much-admired prose is suspenseful, rich with detail, and yet restrained, even delicate, in its images of Lester´s activities. So tightly focused is the story on this one "child of God" that it resembles a myth, or parable. "You could say that he´s sustained by his fellow men, like you.... A race that gives suck to the maimed and the crazed, that wants their wrong blood in its history and will have it."¤ Page Updated: Robert N. Goolsby, 1-Dec-2008, 06797287409780679728740, 350-240-320-400-590-280-8
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