The Road, by Cormac McCarthy: a messianic tale in a post-apocalyptic world

For the past two years, I have been writing book reviews on this blog, which is like a notebook for me. The beauty of notebooks is the freedom they give us to do everything we want on their blank pages. From now on, I'll continue writing about my reading experiences and book reviews, but I will also try to practice my English writing. 

I have been living in the US for a while, and maybe I'll stay here for a little longer. I want to start practicing and improving my writing in this foreign language. That being said, I'm talking today about The Road, by Cormac McCarthy, the same author of No Country for Old Men (Onde os fracos não tem vez), which movie adaptation won the Best Picture Oscar in 2007. 

This book was a surprise. My husband bought it a long time ago from a second-hand bookseller. I knew neither the book nor the author and never got any closer. All these past months the book has been wandering around my house. First, on the nightstand for a while, waiting for Allan to pick it up. When we noticed it wouldn't be read any time soon, it went to the TV stand, in the living room. Finally, I was putting it on a small shelf cart I bought to organize the books when I gave it a quick look and got interested.


Probably because I read so many classic books from the 19th century in the past few months, I'm now eager to read contemporary books. The Road was published in 2006 and became a national bestseller in the US. In Brazil, A Estrada was published in 2007 by Companhia das Letras. 


It is a post-apocalyptic tale about a father and his son trying to survive in a destroyed world. We are not told what has happened. A nuclear war? A meteor? We only know that everybody is dead and the world is burnt. There is a thick and dark atmosphere with little sunlight. It rains and snows. The weather is very cold and everything is covered by ashes. The few survivors have to wear masks and fight for food in a dead world where there are no more animals and plants. Not only humans have been extinct, but also cows, chickens, birds, and fishes. The soil is contaminated and it is not possible to grow vegetables. All they have to survive is canned food that, in one way or another, has outlived the end of the world. 

The man and his son walk on the road toward the south, where they expect it to be warmer. We follow them on their journey. They don't have names. No one who appears in the tale is named. In a deserted world, there are no individuals. Not even many words are needed. McCarthy's writing is almost a poem, with very direct short sentences. 

We follow the father trying to save his son at all costs from famine, cold, lack of sun, killers, thieves, and cannibals. Besides his physical integrity, the father also tries to save his son's goodness, hope, and innocent view of people. I suppose the boy is around 8 or 10 years old and he was born in this post-apocalyptical world. From his mother, we know very little. Only a few memories the father has of her. 

Many subjects are discussed in this journey: the love of a father and son, cannibalism, humanity, the relationship between man and nature, and hope - or the lack of it. What touched me the most though was how the annihilation of the world is, in fact, related to the disappearance of memory. Constantly the boy asks his father "what is this?" and the man slowly passes to him what he knows and remembers. However, at one point, he realizes that it is impossible to talk and live in that new world, without regretting the loss of the old world. Their reality is the consequence of the death of what it was. He can't show his son what it is in other terms other than death, loss, and disappearance. 

In a dead world, where can one find food? When famine, can humanity and hope endure? 

Despite all the post-apocalyptic horror, the book has an optimistic message - and a kind of messianic too. It is supposed that the boy carries "the fire", and they have a major goal to fulfill, bigger than themselves. Exactly like it is not revealed how the world ended up in that way, this "fire" the boy carries isn't much explored either. In The Road, everything is only suggested, not explained. 

I liked it very much. I do recommend it! You can find it on Amazon Brasil and Amazon US. There is also a movie released in 2009, I think it is available on Amazon Prime, but I haven't seen it yet.