This was my
first Cormac McCarthy. Years ago I have meant to try The Road, but after reading about his poor-punctuation style, I
cancelled it. All the Pretty Horses
is the first of his Border Trilogy,
and since I'm always interested in similar theme, I thought this would be my
entrance - and who knows, I might enjoy it!
I was wrong.
The theme is great, but it's far from what I've expected. The story is dark,
and at times it's even quite bloody, despite of "all the pretty
horses".
John Grady
Cole is a 17 y.o. boy grew up in a ranch. The ranch has become his life, so
when his mother decided to sell it after all the family died, Grady decided to
leave the ranch altogether. Together with his friend, Lacey Rawlins, he
travelled to Mexico to become a cowboy - a romantic dream of boys their age.
Before
crossing Mexican border, they met a skinny and shaggy young boy called Jimmy
Blevins, who insisted that he was 16 y.o., and that the (too fine) horse he is
riding is really his. Out of compassion, the two boys (Grady in particular;
Rawlins distrusted Blevins from the first) let the skinny boy rode with them
along the way. Blevins' horse run away one night after a terrible thunderstorm,
bringing with it Blevins' vintage pistol (again, they doubted it really belongs
to the boy). Blevins convinced Grady and Rawlins to steal the horse back after
they found it in a nearby village. It turned into a chaos; Blevins was caught,
and the boys ran away.
Eventually
they found a big ranch, and were hired as workers. Impressed with Grady's great
skill with horses, the owner brought him to stay near the big house. Grady fell
in love with the boss' daughter Alejandra. At around this time a group of
rangers came to the ranch, caught Grady and Rawlins, and put them into jail,
where they had hard times, and almost got killed.
Enough with
the summary, now let me bring out my scale to weigh the whole story:
Positive things:
* the cowboy
things, both during the journey, but especially at the ranch (the horse
trainings are fabulous!)
*
bildungsroman - it's marvelous to witness how their journey matured Grady and
Rawlins. When you are close with the nature, you'll think a lot about life,
God, and all spiritual and philosophical stuffs.
Negative things:
* lack of
punctuation - how annoying it is to follow a long dialog without proper
punctuation; you'll get lost of who's talking right now, and it lacks the
emotion too.
*
polysyndetic syntax - okay, I confess I have had no idea that Hemingway's style
has a name! Yep, it feels like reading Hemingway, you know... with a lot of
"and" serves as the only conjunction on a passage. I guess it's half
the reason I'd stopped reading Hemingway! So polysyndetic is something about
"conveying a flow and continuity of experience in a passage" using
certain conjunctions.
So, what's
the final verdict? I guess 3 / 5 is the max. Another writer to be deleted from
my list.