About this title: By the author of the critically acclaimed Border Trilogy, "Child of God" is a taut, chilling novel that plumbs the depths of human degradation. Lester Ballard, a violent, solitary and introverted young backwoodsman dispossessed on his ancestral land, is released from jail and allowed to haunt the hill country of East Tennessee, preying on the ...
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Binding: Trade paperback
Publisher: Vintage Books USA
Date Published: 1993
ISBN-13:9780679728740ISBN:0679728740
Description: Very good. No dust jacket as issued. Spine straight, binding tight, no reader/remainder/library marks, covers/pgs flat w/sharp corners, very slight shelf wear. 1697 numbered pgs. Audience: General/trade. Photos or other information on this item available by e-mail. Daily responses to orders/e-mail. E-mail confirmation of shipment. Check our feedback. read more
Binding: Softcover
Publisher: Vintage Books
Date Published: 1993-08-01
ISBN-13:9780679728740ISBN:0679728740
Description: NEW. Softcover. From an inventory that is 100% brand-new, 100% direct from the publishers' distribution channel. We carry NO pre-owned, NO remaindered. We pack in CARDBOARD to ensure the pristine quality is maintained. (Bubble-wrap alone is NOT sufficient to protect from USPS equipment. ) Guaranteed brand-NEW, protected with CARDBOARD, your satisfaction is guaranteed. BKLUVID: 9780679728740. read more
Binding: Paperback
Publisher: Vintage
Date Published: 1993
ISBN-13:9780679728740ISBN:0679728740
Description: New. Brand New! Buy with confidence-your satisfaction is guaranteed at B-Logistics! Due to the large scale of our operation, we do not have access to the specific contents/condition of our items. Please note that Expedited shipping is not available at this time. read more
"So there I was, freshly finished with McCarthy's Blood Meridian and aching for more of the same. After many arduous hours on Amazon I finally chose a care package containing Child of God, Suttree, The Orchard Keeper and Outer Dark. Being far more familiar with his Border Trilogy as well as The Road and No Country For Old Men, I was finding his earlier fiction to be much more enjoyable the further I delved. Child of God was phenomenal and despite what many other reviewers have said; I think this would be the perfect starting-point for anyone interested in reading McCarthy's work. Now watch as I list for you the reasons why:
1) It's tiny - 197 pages in large font, who would find that daunting?
2) The plot - the character of Lester Ballard will go down in literary history as one of the most disturbing, dirty and depraved human beings ever to grace the pages of a book. You almost feel like you should shower after spending time in Ballard's world.
3) Style - It subtly introduces the reader into the techniques that McCarthy perfects in his later works in an innocent and non-threatening way. I personally found the lack of punctuation barely noticeable after say, page 3.
4) Genius - It's a fantastic book that should take all of an hour to read. It piques ones curiosity and makes you want more which is what any good literature should really be doing. I wish he would hurry up and give the reading world another classic!"
"I recently became a fan of Cormac McCarthy's writing. I started with The Road and then No Country For Old Men. It is interesting to contrast these later works after diving into the novel Child of God published in 1973. The one conclusion that I can make after the comparison is that McCarthy's work has become a lot more accessible, more mainstream. The question that comes to mind after reading Child of God is whether McCarthy's writing has changed, or has our society simply become more depraved, more like the characters that populate McCarthy's fictional landscapes. The one thing that you can definitely say after reading Child of God is that McCarthy truly writes situations that are uncomfortable to read and and truly...well, icky. But, in general society has become more icky--or at least the icky parts of society are shared more widely today in the world of 24 hour news and the internet. Does McCarthy's work seem more mainstream because of these changes in our world, or simply an evolution of writing style?
My impression of McCarthy's writing in Child of God was that he was trying to write like William Faulkner. Constructed of vignettes of changing perspectives and situations that you are thrown into the middle of, sometimes it was hard to determine exactly what was happening. And to whom. That is not to say it was poorly written, far from it. I would say that McCarthy's ability to quickly set the reader in a situation and provide the necessary background has progressed over the years--the newer novels are definitley more accessible and more easily read, but McCarthy's ability to tell a story and detail some real-world characters is present in the novel. As it progresses, it is truly engrossing. Just know that it is disturbing as well."
"Hmm, not sure what I thought of this one. I have enjoyed everything I have read by McCarthy so far but I'm not so enthusiastic about this one. I thought that it was gratuitously unpleasant and, unlike 'No Country for Old Men' where the violence has a kind of meaning, I didn't think there was any in this. I didn't feel any compassion or interest in the protagonist as he committed his various crimes: I wasn't interested in the story at all.
Obviously, this is just my view. It's still worth reading and it's clearly a novel that could only be written by a very skilful writer but I didn't think it was as good as his other books."
"Well, not sure what exactly to say about this book other than it's every horror film rolled into one practically. McCarthy's descriptions are always top notch, even in a relatively few words he can get a pretty powerful image in your head, one that you'll probably want to get rid of soon after reading this.
It has: rape, necrophilia, child abuse, child rape, incest, murder, slander, deformities, amputation, lots of sex,wearing of dead bodies, and other horrible things....Just everything you want on a nighttime read...heh Anyways, the characters are memorable(unfortunately), the writing is really well done, and even has some similarities to "no country", as in you can see where he is developing as a writer....so it's an interesting read.
There is also a lot of reading between the lines in the book, where you are figuring out what is happening through the wording and feeling that McCarthy is expressing.(a lot of fill in the blanks with your mind is what i mean) I think i would have given this book one more star if it wasn't so horrible(which i know shouldn't matter), but to me it was sort of cliche in a couple of areas, otherwise well done."
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