Criticism > Contemporary Literary Criticism > McCarthy, Cormac - Jay Twomey (essay date spring-summer 1999)
McCarthy, Cormac - Jay Twomey (essay date spring-summer 1999)
Jay Twomey (essay date spring-summer 1999)
SOURCE: Twomey, Jay. “Tempting the Child: The Lyrical Madness of Cormac McCarthy's Blood Meridian.” Southern Quarterly 37, nos. 3-4 (spring-summer 1999): 255-65.
[In the following essay, Twomey characterizes Blood Meridian as a battle between the madness of Judge Holden, who converts the Glanton Gang to his irrational mindset, and the resistant kid—a battle in which the judge finally triumphs.]
I walked in a desert. And I cried, “Ah, God, take me from this place!” A voice said, “It is no desert.” I cried, “Well, but— The sand, the heart, the vacant horizon.” A voice said, “It is no desert.”
—Stephen Crane
Cormac McCarthy's novel Blood Meridian is an epic of violence stark and calamitous, set in the liminal desert. But its depiction of bloodshed is not, as some would have it, a commemoration of “slaughter in all its sumptuousness...
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Criticism
- Andrew Hislop (review date 21-27 April 1989)
- John Emil Sepich (essay date fall 1991)
- John Emil Sepich (essay date summer 1992)
- John Emil Sepich (essay date fall 1993)
- Bernard A. Schopen (essay date summer 1995)
- Denis Donoghue (essay date summer 1997)
- Neil Campbell (essay date fall 1997)
- Jonathan Pitts (essay date spring 1998)
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- William Dow (essay date March 2000)
- Jason P. Mitchell (essay date spring 2000)
- Sara Spurgeon (essay date 2002)
- Christopher Douglas (essay date fall 2003)
- Dwight Eddins (essay date fall 2003)
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