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2212 ratings, 4.04 average rating, 216 reviews
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published
March 14th 1995
(first published 1994)
by Vintage
binding
Paperback, 432 pages
isbn
0679760849
(isbn13: 9780679760849)
description
The opening section of The Crossing, book two of the Border Trilogy, features perhaps the most perfectly realized storytelling of Cormac McCart...more
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other reviews (showing 1-20 of 2992)
The Crossing is an astonishing book, more downbeat than All the Pretty Horses, yet not as bleak as the likes of Blood Meridian, it is a sprawling coming-of-age tale filled with moments of beauty and sorrow. The descriptions are as beautiful as anything Cormac McCarthy writes, the action is sparse but nailbiting when it comes and the characters are brilliantly realised. There are moments when the book lags but whenever this happens you can be assured that within a couple of pages McCarthy will co...more
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Read in June, 2008
Alice Munro said in an interview that our lives begin as straightforward stories with the typical arc of fiction, but that as we go on living they become strange, experimental narratives, convoluted and difficult to interpret. It seems to me that's what's happening in this second volume of the Border Trilogy. Volume One was pretty straightforward, taut and clear in its construction. It told a story of a young man's searing introduction to the adult world. Volume Two does the same--with a differe...more
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Read in August, 2008
not so into it thus far
update 8/11 - gettin' good!
update 8/23 - about halfway thru it now, it's just okay
update 8/26 - almost done, and i'm kinda glad
finished 8/28 -
Overall pretty tedious (and ridiculously overwritten) and barely even interesting as a prequel to Cities since Billy isn't even the interesting part of that one. After the first chapters' brilliantly climactic structure, the only real points of interest are these episodic vignettes relayed to the main character (and h...more
update 8/11 - gettin' good!
update 8/23 - about halfway thru it now, it's just okay
update 8/26 - almost done, and i'm kinda glad
finished 8/28 -
Overall pretty tedious (and ridiculously overwritten) and barely even interesting as a prequel to Cities since Billy isn't even the interesting part of that one. After the first chapters' brilliantly climactic structure, the only real points of interest are these episodic vignettes relayed to the main character (and h...more
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Read in April, 2008
recommended to Ava by:
no one - i found it on a bookshelf on deploymentrecommends it for: people that like westerns or just like simple, uncluttered story-telling
this book has some of my favorite qualities: written in simple prose the way people (in that time and setting) would really think and speak, the characters are multi-layered and complex - like real people (not all good or all bad - so it's an "adult" book - not a children's book), the situations are easy to relate to for the most part (even if your not a white cowboy from the southwest), everything doesn't turn out rosey and happy - there's good and bad, happy and sad and what i like m...more
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Read in January, 2008
recommended to Jenny by:
Pete and the book club!
This was a fairly bleak read, the story of this boy's life as he journeys in and out of Mexico and New Mexico. But I walked away with a pretty Zen feeling, reminded that life has ups and downs and all sorts of surprise consequences, some good and some bad. It reminded me of my favorite quote from the Tao te Ching, "Things arise and she lets them come, things disappear and she lets them go." As he travels, he listens to older people share their thoughts on life, and here's my favorit...more
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Read in December, 2007
On par with Coetzee’s Dusklands and Life and Times of Michael K. And that’s about the highest compliment a book can get from me. Although he probably leaves us with as little tangible hope as Coetzee, the sense of gentle desolation McCarthy conveys gives the loss that permeates the book an intangibly beauty. (In fact it’s largely about living with the intangibility of lost beauty.) At the same time it’s nothing less than devastating, all the more so because he never loses his steadfast c...more
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Read in September, 2007
After finishing All the Pretty Horses, I felt (maybe somewhat unjustly) that the bar of expectation had been set extremely high. I realize that some (most?) people have a particular favorite part of McCarthy’s Border Trilogy, but I’d be hard-pressed to choose one after reading The Crossing. However, the change was noticeable and I was relieved that the second book wasn’t just a rehashing of the first in theme and tone. The Crossing does maintain the elegant, sprawli...more
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Read in January, 2007
Of the three McCarthy novels I've read so far, this is my favorite. The story is more compelling than in Blood Meridian and there are none of the purple passages that I recall from my reading of All the Pretty Horses years ago. With this book, McCarthy's fictional world becomes more complex in terms of the balance of good and evil. Yes, there are cold-blooded killers and thieves who commit gruesome acts of violence, but there are also numerous characters--many of them poor gypsies and Mexican In...more
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Read in October, 2007
recommends it for:
Everyone
If you enjoyed ALL THE PRETTY HORSES which is the first book in Cormac McCarthy's Border Trilogy, you will be equally enchanted by THE CROSSING.
The first time I tried this, 10 years ago, I couldn't get into it, but inspired by THE ROAD which I read this summer, I decided to try again and have been amply rewarded.
McCarthy is an eloquent writer. This is the story of a young American boy and his brother, who leave New Mexico after the brutal murder of their parents by horse thieves, and ...more
The first time I tried this, 10 years ago, I couldn't get into it, but inspired by THE ROAD which I read this summer, I decided to try again and have been amply rewarded.
McCarthy is an eloquent writer. This is the story of a young American boy and his brother, who leave New Mexico after the brutal murder of their parents by horse thieves, and ...more
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Read in November, 2007
My impression of this one mirrors many of the reviews I've read:
The first section with Billy and the wolf is stunning and surely among the best descriptions of man's relationship with the wild in literature.
The middle section meanders. I felt I needed a map to keep track of the brothers' wanderings in and out of Mexico, and many of their encounters with minor characters were unsatisfying. It was difficult to believe Boyd's connection with "the girl" when she wasn't even given...more
The first section with Billy and the wolf is stunning and surely among the best descriptions of man's relationship with the wild in literature.
The middle section meanders. I felt I needed a map to keep track of the brothers' wanderings in and out of Mexico, and many of their encounters with minor characters were unsatisfying. It was difficult to believe Boyd's connection with "the girl" when she wasn't even given...more
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Read in January, 1995
This is my favorite Cormac McCarthy book. Again, more darkness, but his ability to capture time and place in such a native capacity without being one, and with a most unique use of language, still amazes me.
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Read in August, 2007
recommends it for:
anyone
this book blew my mind--an amazing examination of the American notion of justice. there is none. So stop looking for it.
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Read in January, 2003
read this book so you can see the truth, then want to die.
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Read in November, 2008
More Cormac McCarthy that I'm continously astounded by...
This is not my favorite of the series thus far (All the Pretty Horses is incredibly hard competition), and while I only have about forty pages to go, I'm not really looking forward to the final book in the trilogy.
There are some elements to this novel that really appealed to me on a more childish level - that Billy essentially manages to tame and befriend the wolf was overwhelmingly satisfying for me. But it seems any derived satis...more
This is not my favorite of the series thus far (All the Pretty Horses is incredibly hard competition), and while I only have about forty pages to go, I'm not really looking forward to the final book in the trilogy.
There are some elements to this novel that really appealed to me on a more childish level - that Billy essentially manages to tame and befriend the wolf was overwhelmingly satisfying for me. But it seems any derived satis...more
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This book does not take place in the real world despite McCarthy’s clear description and deceptively apt presentation. Don’t be fooled. The majority of the story takes place in Mexico, which is here a surreal landscape akin to the existential dreamscape of the protagonist’s psyche. Though within these planes wander teachers of endless philosophical bent. The book reads as a series of parables and debacles amounting to an epic quest, very much of the stuff of “Don Quixote” and “The Ol...more
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Read in September, 2008
This was my fifth McCarthy book. I began in the middle of the Border Trilogy because, according to some reviews I read, The Crossing may be the best of the three. I'll have to read the other books in the trilogy, but, compared to the other McCarthy books I've read (Outer Dark, Blood Meridian, No Country for Old Men, and The Road), this one was quite different. Sure it had McCarthy's unmatched descriptive prose and haunting melodious descriptions, but it also was lacking the sense of tension that...more
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Read in September, 2008
My review will not be as eloquently stated as the rest for McCarthy's novels seem to be on this site. I loved this book.
It took me way too long to read it because of the struggle I had understanding Spanish (mainly), but I loved it. Similar to "All the Pretty Horses", "The Crossing" is the story about one boy, who is faced with very difficult decisions and cause-and-effect situations which shape the type of man they will become. There is love, murder, violence, knives,...more
It took me way too long to read it because of the struggle I had understanding Spanish (mainly), but I loved it. Similar to "All the Pretty Horses", "The Crossing" is the story about one boy, who is faced with very difficult decisions and cause-and-effect situations which shape the type of man they will become. There is love, murder, violence, knives,...more
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recommends it for:
anyone
This was definitely a worthy follow-up to All the Pretty Horses. Horses' protagonist, John Grady Cole, isn't featured in this, the second volume of McCarthy's Border Trilogy. In fact, the events depicted here take place years before Horses. Certain overarcing themes are what make the different volumes of a piece: honor, sacred violence as a right of passage, holding to the old ways, et cetera.
The protagonist here, Billy Parham, is a highly complex and flawed character. The motivation behind...more
The protagonist here, Billy Parham, is a highly complex and flawed character. The motivation behind...more
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Read in July, 2008
There are some astonishing, vivid descriptions which have the quality of ultra-realistic paintings with cinematic quality. Images that stay with you. Like the experience of the man who had his eyes sucked out of his head. And the extremely detailed account of the doctor treating Boyd's grave gunshot wound to the chest. It's like a Thomas Eakins medical painting.
Some might enjoy reading the very detailed account of Billy roping up the wolf or the assembling and the loading of guns all of whi...more
Some might enjoy reading the very detailed account of Billy roping up the wolf or the assembling and the loading of guns all of whi...more
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Read in March, 2008
When I read the Border Trilogy for the first time several years ago I had a difficult time getting into this second volume and never finished it. This time the opening section sucked me in within a few pages. The ending of Part I made me cry, partly because I was angry at humanity, and I almost wanted to stop there. But I think that's one of McCarthy's great accomplishments in all his books. He's able to not only render the horrible cruelty resident in human nature, but to make readers react emo...more
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