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No Country for Old Men
 
 

No Country for Old Men (Paperback)

de Cormac McCarthy (Author)
3.7étoiles sur 5  Voir tous les commentaires (6 évaluations de client)
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Books in Canada

It has been seven years since Cormac McCarthy published Cities of the Plain, the final volume of his so-called Border Trilogy, and 20 years since he unleashed on the world his ferocious masterpiece, Blood Meridian. The intervening years have found McCarthy in a more contemplative mood, and his newest offering, No Country for Old Men, while by no means devoid of the fire-and-brimstone violence that characterises his earlier work, seems nonetheless more muted, at once more personal and less expansive than the sweeping, apocalyptic epics of the past.
On its surface, No Country for Old Men tells a simple genre story. While hunting antelope near the Texas-Mexico border, Llewellyn Moss happens across a group of vehicles containing several dead men, a stash of drugs, and a document case full of money. Moss takes off with the money, and is soon pursued by a killer-for-hire, and a kindhearted sheriff who wants to find Moss before the bad guys do. This is fairly familiar terrain for a noir-type thriller, but-McCarthy being McCarthy-the author is not quite content to let things rest there.
The first indication that McCarthy is not simply any old hack recycling tired thriller clichTs comes fewer than ten pages into the book, when we are introduced to Chigurh, the freelance killer who chases Moss and the satchel of money. When we first encounter Chigurh he is in manacles, having been arrested for some unspecified crime. The lone deputy in the tiny outpost police station bends to retrieve the keys to the cell and without warning or build-up, Chigurh has the chain of the handcuffs around the deputy's neck: "The nickleplated cuffs bit to the bone. The deputy's right carotid artery burst and a jet of blood shot across the room and hit the wall and ran down it. The deputy's legs slowed and then stopped. He lay jerking. Then he stopped moving altogether."
In a few deft strokes, McCarthy sketches the landscape of his story: a dangerous place where random violence can befall innocents in the blink of an eye, and where the traditional notion that virtue is rewarded and vice punished doesn't apply. Here we glimpse the McCarthy of old: the McCarthy of Blood Meridian, who saw the opening of the American West as an operatic saga drenched in blood. Chigurh is a force of nature, "a true and living prophet of destruction", who tears through the book with the power and effect of a whirlwind.
The counterpoint to Chigurh in the novel is Sheriff Ed Tom Bell, who could perhaps be considered the story's moral centre, to the extent that it has one. Here, again, McCarthy subverts the conventions of a traditional thriller by pulling something of a bait-and-switch on his reader. For the first two thirds of the novel, it is Moss, not Bell, who garners most of our sympathy; it is Moss we are pulling for, in the vain hope that this poor, deluded soul will find some redemption, some way out of the seemingly impossible situation he has created for himself.
But Moss's ultimate fate-and particularly the way that McCarthy handles it-should put the reader on notice: "See?" the author seems to be chiding, "All this time you've been paying attention to the wrong thing." Sheriff Bell eventually emerges as the central figure in the narrative, and as the character who cleaves closest to traditional notions of morality and justice. A decorated war hero, Sheriff Bell is the repository of old-fashioned values that might seem reactionary if they weren't so difficult to dispute:

"I read in the papers here a while back some teachers come across a survey that was sent out back in the thirties to a number of schools around the country. Had this questionnaire about what was the problems with teachin in the schools . . . And the biggest problems they could name was things like talkin in class and runnin in the hallways. Chewin gum. Copyin homework . . . So they got one of them forms that was blank and printed up a bunch of em and sent em back out to the same schools. Forty years later. Well, here come the answers back. Rape, arson, murder. Drugs. Suicide. So I think about that. Because a lot of the time ever when I say anything about how the world is goin to hell in a handbasket people will just sort of smile and tell me I'm gettin old. That it's one of the symptoms. But my feelin about that is that anybody that cant tell the difference between rapin and murderin people and chewin gum has got a whole lot bigger of a problem than what I've got."
Sheriff Bell's ruminations throughout the novel are tinged with a kind of melancholic nostalgia for a vanished world, one in which notions of morality were more clearly defined and more fervently defended. But McCarthy does not portray Bell as some unthinking arch-conservative; even his nostalgia is tinged with remorse and the possibility that the world he longs to recover never really existed in the first place: "I was supposed to be a war hero and I lost a whole squad of men . . . They died and I got a medal."
The world of the novel is an unforgiving one: fallen and barren. It is this fallen, barren world that enables Chigurh to appear, like some demonic avenger, and cut a swath of violence and murder. Sheriff Bell, who decided in middle age that Satan didn't exist, finds that he must now accept such thinking: Satan, he reasons, "explains a lot of things that otherwise don't have no explanation."
These are the kinds of issues that McCarthy has previously grappled with: the big questions of life and death, and mankind's place in a universe that often seems antithetical to human survival. Like his hero Dostoevsky, McCarthy is an existential writer in the best and truest sense of the word: he insists that a person's character is defined by an act of will and that it is impossible to outrun the consequences of one's actions. Moss tries to escape the consequences of his actions, only to discover the futility of this endeavour: "You think when you wake up in the mornin that yesterday dont count. But yesterday is all that does count."
What is missing in No Country for Old Men is the sense that this existential battle is played out on a vast canvas; there is little of the grandeur that elevated Blood Meridian to the status of myth. That earlier book owes a huge debt to Melville-one of the writers whom, along with Faulkner, McCarthy most closely resembles. It is messy, elegiac, and infused with a language that is almost Biblical in its ferocity. By contrast, the new novel is quieter, more constrained. The Texas landscapes seem somehow less expansive, and by comparison with the apocalyptic fury of the earlier work, the language is tamed and subdued. Instead of an elegy, it is a lament; instead of a sprawling, Hieronymus Bosch-like epic, we are presented with the sepia tones of an old photograph.
This is perhaps appropriate for a book that deals so insistently with the themes of aging and nostalgia, and it would be foolish to fault McCarthy for changing modes to suit his story. No Country for Old Men is arguably McCarthy's most accessible book, but it is difficult to entirely dismiss the idea that its accessibility comes at a cost. In tightening his focus, in reducing and narrowing his scope, McCarthy has created a work of great immediacy, but one lacking in the transcendent qualities of his earlier book. No Country for Old Men is a meditation about the aged; Blood Meridian is a story for the ages.
Steven W. Beattie (Books in Canada)
--Ce texte provient de la Hardcover édition.


From Publishers Weekly

Starred Review. Seven years after Cities of the Plain brought his acclaimed Border Trilogy to a close, McCarthy returns with a mesmerizing modern-day western. In 1980 southwest Texas, Llewelyn Moss, hunting antelope near the Rio Grande, stumbles across several dead men, a bunch of heroin and $2.4 million in cash. The bulk of the novel is a gripping man-on-the-run sequence relayed in terse, masterful prose as Moss, who's taken the money, tries to evade Wells, an ex–Special Forces agent employed by a powerful cartel, and Chigurh, an icy psychopathic murderer armed with a cattle gun and a dangerous philosophy of justice. Also concerned about Moss's whereabouts is Sheriff Bell, an aging lawman struggling with his sense that there's a new breed of man (embodied in Chigurh) whose destructive power he simply cannot match. In a series of thoughtful first-person passages interspersed throughout, Sheriff Bell laments the changing world, wrestles with an uncomfortable memory from his service in WWII and—a soft ray of light in a book so steeped in bloodshed—rejoices in the great good fortune of his marriage. While the action of the novel thrills, it's the sensitivity and wisdom of Sheriff Bell that makes the book a profound meditation on the battle between good and evil and the roles choice and chance play in the shaping of a life.
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved. --Ce texte provient de la Hardcover édition.

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3.7étoiles sur 5 (6 évaluations de client)
 
 
 
 
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10 internautes sur 11 ont trouvé ce commentaire utile :
5.0étoiles sur 5 The master best novel yet!, Aoû 8 2005
This review is from: No Country for Old Men (Hardcover)
I have read the "Border Trilogy," and "All the Pretty Horses" was my favorite, especially the horse breaking scenes and the scenes set in the Mexican Prison. BUT a lot of the time McCarthy leaves me scratching my head. Sometimes his stories go wandering off on tangents I just don't get (I sometimes fear I am just not intelligent enough to understand his point). This book however is more direct and simply laid out. A kind of modern day thriller that has so much more going on.

The basic story is this: While out hunting along the Rio Grande river, Llewelyn Moss, a Texas welder, stumbles upon $2 million, and a bunch of herion ready for the street all guarded by a dead man. Ross takes the money and is soon on the run from drug dealers, assassins, and the law. The author uses the plot as way to explore good and evil, heaven and hell, right and wrong; and do these things even exist?

The book also contains plenty of action and some very gory, brutal scenes, so if you are bothered by graphic violence be forwarned! The Violence, though is central to the story and the issues the author is exploring.

To sum up this is an excellent thriller read with a lot more to say, than just entertain. I also recommend "Tourist in the Yucatan" another Violent thriller, set in Mexico, about a gringo on the run from people on both sides of the law, while also trying to find his missing wife.

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3 internautes sur 3 ont trouvé ce commentaire utile :
4.0étoiles sur 5 Looking for clarity, Fév 11 2008
Par Simon Blake (Toronto, ON Canada) - Voir tous mes commentaires
(REAL NAME)   
I have to admit that I bought the book after seeing the movie in the hopes that it would bring some clarity to the ending. It did, to some degree. The first third or so of the book is very close to the movie but the characters are much better developed. The sheriff is very much the main character in the book, unlike the movie.
However, at times I felt like I was reading a book by a real gun nut because of the detail in which McCarthy described the weapons and methods of killing. There are a couple of places in the book that strain the credibility of the story, not least of which is what finally becomes of the money.
This is the first book by Cormac McCarthy that I have ever read. It is certainly not an uplifting tale, but it is a powerful story that is written extremely well and it does make me want to read some of his previous works. I would recommend it highly.
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3.0étoiles sur 5 A Country for Young Men, Oct. 5 2009
Par Pol Sixe "hpolvi" (Thornhill, Ontario Canada) - Voir tous mes commentaires
I chose to read this book after seeing the movie. Wow, it is like a screenplay, the moviemakers have been *very* faithful to the dialogue and settings in the book. So, that kind of spoiled the book, which then ends up more as filling in the few gaps the film may have skipped over or omitted. The tone of the book seems very Tex/Mex desert dry and hard. Conversations are spare, colloquial and styled without quotations. If the story takes place c.1980 there's a couple of anachronisms - cell phone and ATM references, which, as I recall, weren't in wide use back then. The Sheriff's lamentations on the changing times and morality in the US, not just the cruelty of the criminals in this case, but also drugs, abortion, respect becomes the main theme. Maybe McCarthy is right, we'll reap what we sow, but the last many pages become an old man's gripe, hard to finish.
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4.0étoiles sur 5 A contemporary Western morality tale that resonates with social relevance.
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