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"The Road" (2006) by Cormac McCarthy REVIEW


My mother listened to the audio book, my father watched the movie, and here I am, having just finished a printed copy of this magnificent book.

A man and his son walk a road in a post-apocalyptic world with one goal: Make it south, to the coast, to survive the winter. With only a pistol with two bullets, their supplies in a grocery cart, and each other, they struggle to survive from starvation and avoid the danger that lurks in the darkness that surrounds them.

The Road, in itself, is a masterpiece. It is a collection of poems written simply and used to tell the story (so, yeah, cool your jets, grammar nazis). The story is intriguing, the details vivid, and the prose gripping. The world Cormac McCarthy creates is realistic and quite disturbing. There were times when reading the book when I cringed or had to re-read some parts because I couldn't believe what I had just read. And the overall stories of good and evil and a bond between a father and son are extremely well executed.

The Road is perhaps one of the best of the post-apocalyptic genre, being both well-written and containing a great plot and great characters.

Rating: 16+
5/5 Stars

You can buy your copy of the book from Amazon here!

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