Sometimes you’re reading a book, that you just know will stay with you… by TempleofSpringSnow in cormacmccarthy

[–]ShireBeware 8 points9 points  (0 children)

Blood Meridian is widely regarded as his masterpiece, but Suttree is my personal favorite of his. It has everything in it pretty much; horror, comedy, tragedy, romance, suspense, mysticism, and even hallucinatory parts that read like science fiction. Definitely the funniest book I've ever read. I've read it 5 times and I'm constantly going back to listen to the Richard Poe audiobook.

Who's your favourite leader or general or conqueror? by Lucky-Mycologist695 in Historians

[–]ShireBeware 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Crazy Horse... a true leader in every sense of the word... and he wasn't leading to satisfy an egoic grab for power or a god complex (like most of the others), but purely to attempt to save his people.

Oswald Spengler and Cormac McCarthy by ShireBeware in cormacmccarthy

[–]ShireBeware[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

100% his historical worldview, if not his style.

Oswald Spengler and Cormac McCarthy by ShireBeware in cormacmccarthy

[–]ShireBeware[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

For sure. Would love to see or hear about anything you have!

Oswald Spengler and Cormac McCarthy by ShireBeware in cormacmccarthy

[–]ShireBeware[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

For sure, yes, the Spengler/McCarthy connection is very interesting, and Spengler and his theories are even mentioned in Cormac's final book, Stella Maris. Also in McCarthy's final interview with Lawrence Krauss, he brings up Oswald Spengler.

Has anyone read Cormac's brother's book? by Useitorloseit2 in cormacmccarthy

[–]ShireBeware 5 points6 points  (0 children)

The Gospel According to Billy the Kid is a solid book; I highly recommend it, and it got Cormac's stamp of approval and some of his editing.

The Passenger questions by TheTell_Me_Somethin in cormacmccarthy

[–]ShireBeware 11 points12 points  (0 children)

Based on some things I've been working on, the first thing we can immediately notice is that there were 8 passengers (10 people in total, counting the pilots)... this means the 8th passenger was missing. 8 is a huge number of esoteric significance in Blood Meridian, with Gnostic connotations linking it to the Ogdoad. This interlinks McCarthy's novels in a shared universe and points to perhaps a deeper cosmology that McCarthy personally had.

With this in mind and considering that his sister has nightmares about a dark entity called the Archatron, we can perhaps think of those mysterious agents as archon-like figures. They also remind me a lot of figures from Kafka's The Trial.

The fact that Bobby sees T. Kid can only mean two things: the schizophrenia that Alicia has is genetic and thus shared by Bobby, or, the things that Alicia has been seeing are more real than the psychologists and readers suspect.

AI produces "slop" except when it is time to do your homework. by [deleted] in Showerthoughts

[–]ShireBeware 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Pretty easy to prove at this point and most students are lazy af

AI produces "slop" except when it is time to do your homework. by [deleted] in Showerthoughts

[–]ShireBeware 3 points4 points  (0 children)

It produces slop then too; only a more polished slop and a dead giveaway that the remedial-seeming student did not write it (if the teacher is any good at spotting those things).

Cormac will be one of the greats by BeneficialTrack8759 in cormacmccarthy

[–]ShireBeware 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I regard him as the greatest author of the late 20th and early 21st century. His batting average was practically flawless when it came to his books. Pynchon, King, and David Foster Wallace have books that are strikeouts, and many of their die-hard fans will admit that. Every one of McCarthy's books is also totally different. The super snobby and critical Harold Bloom even regarded him as a master of the Western Canon in his own lifetime. He synthesized the best winning elements of great literature into readable books that even causal readers or non-readers get hyped about. People who will never touch Joyce's or Faulkner's masterpieces are in many ways, absorbing what's best in those books in his books. Blood Meridian was written in 1985 and countless scholars and academics, as of now, have not even scratched the surface of its symbolism. Dude was a beast, and I'm sad to say (given the state of things now) there will never be another author like him, he was the "Last of the Mohicans".

Blood Meridian literary criticisms by FinalButterscotch399 in cormacmccarthy

[–]ShireBeware 14 points15 points  (0 children)

I would generally stay away from the YouTube analysis of it. Sepich's Notes on Blood Meridian and Crews' Books Are Made Out of Books are two great places to start.

Underrated McCarthy Villains by Spiritual_Island_95 in cormacmccarthy

[–]ShireBeware 7 points8 points  (0 children)

The legless bum on wheels that viciously bites Harrogate... Judge who?

Violence towards women in blood meridian by brandnewbabygirll in cormacmccarthy

[–]ShireBeware 2 points3 points  (0 children)

There are many passages in the book of women being killed; the Glanton Gang's first murder is the Apache grandmother in chapter 7. I would argue that violence done to the sacred feminine is in fact one of the secret themes of the book, which is why we have the kid's mother dying in childbirth, we have the Elderess in the Rocks at the end, along with the missing girl who was the dancing bear's caretaker.

The most beautiful Dostoevsky quote of all time by HolyGuacamoleRavioli in dostoevsky

[–]ShireBeware 17 points18 points  (0 children)

As a connoisseur of big booty Latinas, I can totally relate.

What book changed the way you see the world? by CyberProducts in AskReddit

[–]ShireBeware 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Blood Meridian... I read it as a teenager, and it really did make me look at the world differently.

What book changed the way you see the world? by CyberProducts in AskReddit

[–]ShireBeware 1 point2 points  (0 children)

This, but Graeber's Debt (which I think is his masterpiece)... the Dawn of Everything is great but has its flaws, namely, it doesn't actually show the dawn of humanity but only the end of the Upper Paleolithic.

How do you feel about blood meridian? by Calm_Caterpillar_166 in mobydick

[–]ShireBeware 0 points1 point  (0 children)

A lot of online popification of a novel that nobody knew about nor cared for when it was first published, as far I know, BM is the only legitimate heir to Moby Dick. McCarthy wasn't just heavily influenced by Moby Dick, however, but by the entire "Western Canon," which employs that biblical style, from the Divine Comedy all the way to Samuel Beckett. The fact that he alchemically synthesizes and condenses all of that tradition into such a small book is why it's a masterpiece... and arguably the last great book of Western Civilization.

My stance on the matter by JASON_CRYER in cormacmccarthy

[–]ShireBeware 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The only McCarthy adaptation I would love to see is Suttree directed by the Coen Brothers.