Cormac McCarthy just had his portrait inducted into the Smithsonian’s National Portrait Gallery and during in interview with one of the leading members of the Cormac McCarthy Society, there is mention of a rumor that McCarthy has four novels in the can already. Read the interview for yourself.

WP: McCarthy seems to be hitting his stride at the moment with a Pulitzer for The Road and an Oscar for No Country for Old Men. What is on the event horizon for him?

MP: Despite a few recent appearances and interviews—Oprah Winfrey, the Oscars—Cormac McCarthy remains a private, if not reclusive (as is often assumed), person. McCarthy continues his association with the Sante Fe Institute, and rumors claim as many as four completed novels awaiting publication. One is assumed to be his long-awaited “New Orleans Novel,” although this cannot be verified. Several tantalizing projects related to his work are, or appear to be, on the horizon, from the film adaptation of The Road to another often-discussed project, the movie of Blood Meridian.

WP: Where does he stand in our canon—that is, who can we compare him to stylistically, thematically—or, to extend, will McCarthy be spoken of in one hundred years like we speak of Melville today?

MP: Harold Bloom has said that Cormac McCarthy is the best living American writer. As that’s a category that includes Philip Roth and Nobel Laureate Toni Morrison, among many others of renown and considerable skill, it seems fair to say that McCarthy is one of the most important and influential Americans writing today. Charles Frazier and others have frankly acknowledged the influence, and given McCarthy’s early reputation as a “writer’s writer,” it’s likely that he’ll be considered crucial to an understanding of American literature into the present century.

McCarthy has been compared to any number of writers, among them Melville, Faulkner, Hemingway, and even Shakespeare. Some considerable portion of this repute concerns style; McCarthy’s rhetoric is often similar in tone to those earlier writers, or adopts classical or even Biblical cadences. Through his first four novels, ending with Suttree, McCarthy cursorily appeared to be working as a regionalist, a kind of student of Faulkner’s, even where he diverged from him in terms of theme and sometimes style.

Blood Meridian leaves the South in dramatic (some might say epic) fashion, and is a harbinger of McCarthy’s wider concerns. With it and his more recent works, McCarthy more obviously writes in the mode of various genres—the western, the thriller, and even a kind of science fiction or post-apocalyptic thriller with The Road. McCarthy adopts some of the conventions of these genre pieces, both to comment on and subvert them. These more recent works reveal a writer who has always been concerned not with just “the South” or “the West,” but with larger epistemological and metaphysical questions. Engagement with these issues of universal concern suggests McCarthy’s continued relevance in—and importance to—the ongoing discussion that is literature in the United States.

If this is indeed true, I hope these are released soon, because I am almost out of McCarthy material to read and then I won’t know what to do with myself. What will I read? What will I live for? Why would I even bother to go on?


This discussion currently has 2 responses.

  1. Christian A. Dumais
    February 11, 2009

    I’d recommend reading Jim Crace. He’s an author most people have never heard of and he’s got a nice selection of books already available. His most recent novel THE PESTHOUSE came out roughly the same time as THE ROAD and also deals with surviving a post-apocalyptic America (and is a nice companion book in a way).

    I’d recommend starting with THE DEVIL’S LARDER, which is a great appetizer for his work. From there, BEING DEAD, which is a love story like nothing you’ve ever read before. If you’re hooked then, you’ll find plenty more of his books to choose from.

    Also, there is always my book EMPTY ROOMS LONELY COUNTRIES, now available on Amazon.

    And I’m thrilled to know there’s plenty of new McCarthy on the horizon.

  2. Jonathan B.
    February 11, 2009

    Nice, Christian. He looks right up my alley. Going to head to the library tomorrow and see what I can pick up.

    Just today, I began reading Shusaku Endo’s Silence, a Japanese novel from the 60s about Jesuit priests in 17th century Japan. It also happens to be Scorsese’s next adaptation apparently with Daniel Day-Lewis in talks to star. Cool.

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