Cormac McCarthy’s body of fiction often offers a relentless, unsparing examination of violence, but it is also mercurial and unpredictable. In the middle part of his career, for instance, he worked within the tradition of the western. Four novels—his putative masterpiece,
Blood Meridian(1985), and the three books comprising the Border Trilogy:
All the Pretty Horses(1992),
The Crossing(1994), and
Cities of the Plain(1998)—all owe a large debt to the genre, while simultaneously dismantling many of its expectations, ideologies, and aesthetics. Those works also explore the vast philosophical questions about good, evil, and fate for which McCarthy is known. Then, in 2005, he published
No Country for Old Men. Like the four previous novels,
No Country for Old Mendraws on many of the…
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Citation: Banco, Lindsey Michael. "No Country for Old Men". The Literary Encyclopedia. First published 03 September 2016 [https://www.litencyc.com/php/sworks.php?rec=true&UID=31212, accessed 21 November 2024.]