Welcome to Booksie's Blog! I write reviews of what I've read, some of which were books sent by publishers or authors. If you would like for me to read and review your book, please contact me. I'd love to have the chance to review for you although I don't usually read to deadlines. My email address is skirkland@triad.rr.com I can't accept everything but I do read and review everything I accept. I average about 10-12 reviews a month. I tend to favor physical books over ebooks for review.
Monday, October 29, 2018
All The Pretty Horses by Cormac McCarthy
It's 1948 in southern Texas, and sixteen year old John Grady Cole has his whole life laid out. He has been raised on the farm that has belonged in his family for decades and he plans to live and die on it as well. When his parents divorce and he finds that his mother plans to sell the farm, his world crumbles. He and his cousin Lacey Rawlins decide to take their horses and ride down to Mexico to live the life he is denied at home.
The two boys ride down across the land, going further and further into Mexico. Along the way they are approached by a fourteen year old boy, Jimmy Blevins, who has two distinguishing characteristics. He is riding a thoroughbred of a horse that he insists is his, and he can shoot the leaf off a tree at a hundred paces. He loses his horse after a storm and when he finds it and is refused ownership by the man who found it, Blevins steals his horse back. He takes off with federales in close pursuit, leaving John Grady and Lacey to go on their way.
They end up at a large Mexican horse ranch. They live the lives of gauchos, rounding up horses and breaking them to saddle. John Grady gets to develop a personal relationship with the farm's owner, a wealthy man who is worldly having lived in many lands. He appreciates John Grady's ability to do anything with a horse but he is outraged when John Grady falls in love with his daughter and she with him. Soon, he betrays the boys by turning them in to the marshals, who are sure that they are as guilty as Jimmy Blevins. How the boys turn into men and the hard lessons they learn as they do so make up this difficult yet beautiful novel.
Cormac McCarthy is one of the United States' national treasures. He writes of a country and a way of life that has mostly disappeared and makes the reader believe in it. John Grady personifies the belief that a man must work hard, be honest and make his word his bond while refusing to allow others to make him move from what he knows is right and honest. The reader is taken along on the ride as John Grady learns what is important to him, what he can do and what he must accept. The novel won a National Book Award in 1992 and is the first book in the Border Trilogy. This book is recommended for readers of literary fiction.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.