dudes, oprah picked the road! is there a thread on that shit? that is some hardcore bleakness. and, oh, yeah, corrections dude, fuck you, cormac is coming.

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NEW YORK — Before Wednesday, few could have imagined the names "Oprah Winfrey" and "Cormac McCarthy" appearing in the same sentence.

McCarthy, one of the country's most revered and press-shy authors — a man only slightly more accessible than J.D. Salinger — will give his first ever television interview, lured by the long arm of Winfrey, publishing's biggest hit-maker and a media superstar.

Winfrey announced Wednesday on her Chicago-based TV show that McCarthy's The Road was her new book club pick.

"Mr. McCarthy respects her work, admires what she has accomplished, has an awareness of her book club, and thought it would be interesting to participate in the conversation with Oprah," McCarthy's publicist, Paul Bogaards of Alfred A. Knopf, told the Associated Press. "He knew who she was when she called."

In selecting The Road, not only will Winfrey meet with an author who, according to Bogaards, has given just two interviews in the past 40 years, but she has taken on a novel with little of the uplifting spirit she often favors.

The Road, published last September by Knopf, is a sparely written story of a father and son trying to survive as they wander through a burned and bare, post-nuclear landscape. Praised almost universally by reviewers, it was a finalist for the National Book Critics Circle prize and is considered a leading contender for the Pulitzer Prize.

"It's unlike anything I've ever chosen as a book club selection before because it's post-apocalyptic. (It is) very unusual for me to select this book, but it's fascinating," Winfrey said on her show.

McCarthy, 73, is known for novels such as All the Pretty Horses and Blood Meridian, and has been widely cited as an heir to William Faulkner for his biblical prose and rural settings, yearning back to a time when television itself, much less TV talk shows, was unthinkable. He has been called too sentimental, but critic Harold Bloom, famous for his discernment, regards McCarthy as one of the greatest living American writers, along with Don DeLillo, Philip Roth and Thomas Pynchon.

"That shows good taste on her part," Bloom said of Winfrey's choice.

Winfrey has taken on harsher stories before, such as Elie Wiesel's Holocaust classic, Night, and, notoriously, James Frey's A Million Little Pieces, a memoir of addiction and recovery that turned out to be largely fabricated.

In the coming weeks, the reclusive McCarthy, who did not appear on Wednesday's show and who lives in Santa Fe, N.M., will conduct his "first television interview ever," Winfrey said.

"It's a bit of a surprise, but a wonderful surprise," McCarthy's editor, Knopf president Sonny Mehta, told the AP. "This is good news for those of us who have been in the Cormac McCarthy business for a very long time."

The Road is one of McCarthy's most popular books, spending several weeks on numerous best seller lists. According to Nielsen BookScan, which tracks about 70 percent of industry sales, it has sold 138,000 copies in hardcover. Thanks to Winfrey, that total should increase by hundreds of thousands. A paperback was not planned until September, but Vintage Books, understandably, is publishing one now, with a massive first printing of 950,000 copies.

"It's going to be a big year for Cormac," said Mehta, noting the planned release later this year of the Coen brothers film, No Country for Old Men, based on the McCarthy novel of the same name.

Winfrey's choice also marks the first time in five years that she has picked a work of contemporary fiction. In 2002, she suspended the club for a year and revived it with an emphasis on "classics," such as John Steinbeck's "East of Eden" and Faulkner's "As I Lay Dying." Her pick before McCarthy was Sidney Poitier's memoir, "The Measure of a Man."

scott seward, Friday, 30 March 2007 04:50 (eighteen years ago)

there's probably a thread. whatever. oprah rules.

scott seward, Friday, 30 March 2007 04:51 (eighteen years ago)

yah she's great. im going to go watch my new favorite movie, THE SECRET, now.

chaki, Friday, 30 March 2007 04:57 (eighteen years ago)

dude, don't get me wrong, she has foisted some pretty iffy shit on the world, but i forgive my lord her trespasses. and doctor fucking phil is a pretty big goddamn trespass.

scott seward, Friday, 30 March 2007 05:01 (eighteen years ago)

Pretty amazing. Remy to thread.

Ned Raggett, Friday, 30 March 2007 05:02 (eighteen years ago)

There was a thread on ILBooks.

milo z, Friday, 30 March 2007 05:02 (eighteen years ago)

what's i love books? hahaha, just kidding...

scott seward, Friday, 30 March 2007 05:03 (eighteen years ago)

if i actually read books anymore i would be on i love books.

scott seward, Friday, 30 March 2007 05:03 (eighteen years ago)

"if you enjoy the road, be sure to try blood meridian!"

i think it's pretty cool. i've been waiting for the road in paperback, now i can buy it with an oprah sticker on it.

tipsy mothra, Friday, 30 March 2007 05:04 (eighteen years ago)

ROASTED BABIES FOR YOU! AND YOU! AND YOU! etc

kenan, Friday, 30 March 2007 05:04 (eighteen years ago)

It reads like a screenplay (or a play), lots of punctuation affectation and it is rather bleak. But I guess if Oprah got millions of people to (pretend to) read Faulkner and Tolstoy, a short quick American novel shouldn't be too much of a stretch.

milo z, Friday, 30 March 2007 05:06 (eighteen years ago)

it had to be a toss-up between the road and non-eggers child soldier memoir. but starbucks probably fucked that scheme up for her by stealing child soldier thunder.

scott seward, Friday, 30 March 2007 05:08 (eighteen years ago)

this is some stopped clock type of shit here, right?

rps, Friday, 30 March 2007 05:09 (eighteen years ago)

Will Oprah make shallow Samuel Beckett comparisons as did so many book reviewers?

milo z, Friday, 30 March 2007 05:10 (eighteen years ago)

this is some stopped clock type of shit here, right?

her track record's not that bad. lots of middlebrow stuff, but also faulkner, morrison, tolstoy, etc.

tipsy mothra, Friday, 30 March 2007 05:20 (eighteen years ago)

(full list)

tipsy mothra, Friday, 30 March 2007 05:21 (eighteen years ago)

two months pass...

Some thoughts in the LA Times as the appearance draws near.

Ned Raggett, Monday, 4 June 2007 05:04 (eighteen years ago)

I believe that if I met Eric Miles Williamson on the road, I would punch him in the nose; unfortunately, he couldn't possibly exist, because no one can be such a snob and such an anti-snob at the same time.

Dimension 5ive, Monday, 4 June 2007 05:42 (eighteen years ago)

Let me know when Oprah picks "Earth Abides" or the "Canticle for Leibovitz". I'm waiting for Fallout/Fallout2 to be infected on an even greater percentage of the population.

kingfish, Monday, 4 June 2007 06:04 (eighteen years ago)

critic Harold Bloom, famous for his discernment

Tracer Hand, Monday, 4 June 2007 06:54 (eighteen years ago)

There's a Naomi Wolf joke here somewhere

marmotwolof, Monday, 4 June 2007 19:06 (eighteen years ago)

The literary establishment believes that if Winfrey likes a book by a living writer, that writer must be awful.

RONG. This guy is an asshat.

His first two wives didn't have the comforts that McCarthy makes available to his current family, thanks to the awards and success of recent years.

Uh. "makes available"??? HUH???

Mr. Que, Monday, 4 June 2007 19:12 (eighteen years ago)

wow that was...something

strongohulkington, Monday, 4 June 2007 19:16 (eighteen years ago)

His nascent talent on the trumpet is encouraged by a school field trip to Reno for a jazz band competition, but, like most hopeful events in T-Bird's life, the experience sours in drunken frustration.

Mr. Que, Monday, 4 June 2007 19:20 (eighteen years ago)

Yet T-Bird is always tainted by the code of blood revenge that haunts his past and present and commits him to an act of brutality that almost results in a man's death. Later, a specialized construction job sets him on a fateful road trip.

Mr. Que, Monday, 4 June 2007 19:20 (eighteen years ago)

Won't need a dictionary or an imagination for that one

marmotwolof, Monday, 4 June 2007 19:22 (eighteen years ago)

Oprah still sucks. Cormac was very patient.

marmotwolof, Tuesday, 5 June 2007 23:48 (eighteen years ago)

HAHAHA NEXT BOOK IS MIDDLESEX

marmotwolof, Tuesday, 5 June 2007 23:55 (eighteen years ago)

two years pass...

Two years on and a movie is made and Todd McCarthy is annoyed.

Ned Raggett, Friday, 4 September 2009 00:31 (sixteen years ago)

finished reading the book and I ended up being pretty sure I didn't like it too much? maybe I'm just maxed out on post-apocalyptic fiction, there was something that seemed off about the relentless brutality, something too easily imagined. didn't feel like more than a book.

kept thinking back to george stewart's earth abides which is one of the best american novels ever imagined, and thinking of the differences -- so much more optimism & nobility in the 1949 vision of humanity's end. some of stewart's vision might in fact be naive, but in this book it's clear that it has gotten so easy to imagine the worst, the absolute worst in what's coming, that it seems like a weakness. something that really bugs me every time I hear about how this book is ultimately about enduring hope. no it's more like a book spun out of those posts to an alex jones youtube that simply says 'when it happens I can tell you I will be with my family'

Milton Parker, Friday, 4 September 2009 00:51 (sixteen years ago)

should have read the ILB thread first before going off, good conversation covers most of the bases already

Cormac McCarthy- The Road

Milton Parker, Friday, 4 September 2009 01:01 (sixteen years ago)

There aren't many of us in ILB, but we are wise.

When two tribes go to war, he always gets picked last (James Morrison), Friday, 4 September 2009 02:50 (sixteen years ago)

one month passes...

spoofing mccarthy:

With the first gray light he rose and walked out to the road and squatted and studied the country to the south. Godless and blasted. A madman’s timeshare. The trees dead, the grass dead, the shrubs dead also. The rivers dead. And the streams and reeds, the mosses and voles. Dead as well. He glassed the ruins, hoping for a shred of color, a wisp of smoke, a faroff Cracker Barrel. There was nothing but swirling gloom, a grasping murk. He sat with the binoculars and the gray, and thought: the child is my warrant. If he is not the word of God God never spoke, although he might have scribbled something on a paperscrap and passed it along. He bit hard on his blistered upperlip. If only I had thought to give him a name. If only.

flying squid attack (tipsy mothra), Wednesday, 21 October 2009 15:50 (sixteen years ago)

(fish in a barrel, admittedly. still nicely done.)

flying squid attack (tipsy mothra), Wednesday, 21 October 2009 15:51 (sixteen years ago)

two months pass...

The film is not awful, but not particularly good either (I have no interest in the book). Surprised it needed so much sci-fi style effects work if they shot so much in western Pennsylvania.

Rage, Resentment, Spleen (Dr Morbius), Saturday, 9 January 2010 17:42 (fifteen years ago)


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