Tournament of Books discussion

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The Passenger
2023 TOB General
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The Passenger
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Bretnie
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rated it 5 stars
Dec 18, 2022 04:46PM

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I agree with you, Bob, that I don't expect this to go far in the tournament -- may even lose the first round unless the judge happens to be a McCarthy fan (or dislikes Mouth to Mouth as much as I did).


I'm only 50 pages or so in, but my sense of the italicized portion is that these are hallucinations by the sister, who is schizophrenic.

I'm only 50 pages or so in, but my sense of the italic..."
Ok, that makes sense, I got a little lost with starting with so many characters.

I'm only 50 pages or so in, but my sense ..."
This is a challenging book. I am now a bit past the 1/4 mark and I can already see that there is going to be a LOT to keep track of here.

Discussed this with someone who has read a lot of McCarthy and he said that he never got the impression that the author ever considered women to exist really, let alone as full characters. Yes, I get that he has a formidable reputation and is very, very old, but I was unable to move past that and the complete lack of focus in this book. Luckily, for Mr. McCarthy, I'm certain he absolutely does not care what a woman thinks anyway.


McCarthy is frequently criticized for the way he writes women characters, and I get that criticism. And yet, Alicia is, to me, an intriguing character. I'm still only about halfway through, so I don't know whether we get more of the Debussy Fields character, but I liked her, too. And, the scene between Bobby and his grandmother was, for this reader, a thing of sorrowful beauty.
This is not to try to talk anyone out of their dislike of the book. It is only to say that I think there is more nuance here than I expected, and (thankfully!) thus far less of the violence I was dreading. So, I'm in the win column with this one, at least so far.

When I read the first pages of Stella Maris, I was blown away by the idea that, as Bob questions, "Is The Passenger all a coma-dream?" UH. WHAT?
I've also heard that Stella Maris is better. And doesn't require you read The Passenger first. Not that I can do that, now. But I think I will read Stella Maris. Someday.

I'm not quite sure what I thought of the JFK stuff, though.
I'm now 6/8 on the left side of the bracket, so I can start to build up some hopes for the judges to dash.


Yes, and ... we know that there is a Part 2 (Stella Maris). I wish he hadn't done that and had, instead, put them together. (And I say that having not yet read Stella Maris).
But, the final scene in The Passenger is quite beautiful (and sad). I have more optimism about the fate of the world than McCarthy seems to (the fabulous John Sheddan character notwithstanding), but I can't deny that if one believes that justice is always going to be perverted by the powerful for their own ends, and that we are likelier to use math and science to hasten ourselves toward extinction than to save ourselves and the planet, one could certainly make a case for that. And he has.

https://lithub.com/on-war-fatherhood-...

https://lithub.com/on-war-fatherhood-an..."
I read that, too. What an incredible piece.




Agreed, Audra. I haven't read NCfOM, nor seen the movie, and I probably won't (I hate watching/reading about violence), but I am very glad The Passenger made the shortlist, which is the only way I'd have read it. It was worth the effort.

I also found it was curious with Stella Maris to hear the Oppenheimer parts in conjunction with reading Trinity by Louisa Hall last year. Makes me want to read American Prometheus as I believe that is the source material for the upcoming movie to get a full scope of Oppenheimer-adjacent art.

2 stars didn't like it.
Probably still going to read Stella Maris though. I acknowledge this is not a logically decision on my part.
Also the physical books are gorgeous.

You crack me up, Tristan. I'll bet you are the first reader ever to say "rice cake" in a review of a McCarthy book.
Stella Maris is, in my view, very different from The Passenger. Entirely different


I have it on hold though I really want to finish TOB books first. I'm kinda torn.


It's a great book, also a great movie.


I have so many DNF this year, they are lying like road kill in every direction! 🤣

The writing felt like all the things I loved about No Country without the cattle slaughter gun. I don't think I mind that we're left without answers, even though I really really want to know! The plane! The people after him! His friends who keep dying!
I wish I could easily find just the Sheddan chapters and re-read them - their conversations were my absolute favorite, but I loved most of Western's conversations with his friends.
I think I was also swayed heavily by the audiobook - I loved the narrator quite a bit.
"Having read even a few dozen books in common is a force more binding than blood." (Sheddan)


...makes all of us here family....

A great in-depth discussion here, although he recommends you not watch the whole thing till you've read it. (I love Leaf by Leaf, his passion for everything he reads.)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4e3pR...

HARD SAME. I was like I so do not want to read this old white dude and it ended up as one of my faves. I will not be taking questions at this time.

LOLOLOLOL, Audra. I should NOT have been sipping a hot liquid when I read that comment!

Then again, I'm pretty pro-McCarthy, "All the Pretty Horses" is an utter masterpiece in my eyes...


Ooh, nice!! I bet they look great together too.
I got a copy from the library this afternoon, as well as the audio from Libby. I'll try the audio alongside (although I'm thinking in the end I'd be better off slowing down the read. It does seem pretty readable, though, at least so far.)

woah nice! Once I'm done Babel, I'm going to read the 2nd one.

Unfortunately, I really loved Mouth to Mouth, and now I’m worried it will get knocked out in the first round by The Passenger.


progresses (at least that was my experience).
The Kid, for me, was one of the best “characters”. I’ve thankfully never experienced schizophrenia, but this character gave me a feel for it. And, what The Kid is saying matters. It isn’t actually “gibberish”, although it seems that way at first.
This is all to say I personally think it’s worth hanging in there with The Passenger and getting your “sea legs” ( pun only partially intended). But, of course, as with all books, YMMV.

Thanks for this, I've been slowing down and looking things up, and convincing myself I'm getting smarter. I love the Kid too, Alicia's scenes are fascinating.
This is such a melancholy book, so much loneliness even though most of the scenes involve conversation, but also some of it is so much fun. And oh my gosh, some of his passages are simply gorgeous, I want to re-read them over and over.


https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...
Books mentioned in this topic
No Country for Old Men (other topics)No Country for Old Men (other topics)
Stella Maris (other topics)