National Bestseller
National Book Critic's Circle Award Finalist
A New York Times Notable Book
One of the Best Books of the Year The Boston Globe, The Christian Science Monitor, The Denver Post, The Kansas City Star, Los Angeles Times, New York, People, Rocky Mountain News, Time, The Village Voice, The Washington Post
The searing, postapocalyptic novel destined to become Cormac McCarthy's masterpiece.
A father and his son walk alone through burned America. Nothing moves in the ravaged landscape save the ash on the wind. It is cold enough to crack stones, and when the snow falls it is gray. The sky is dark. Their destination is the coast, although they don't know what, if anything, awaits them there. They have nothing; just a pistol to defend themselves against the lawless bands that stalk the road, the clothes they are wearing, a cart of scavenged food--and each other.
The Road is the profoundly moving story of a journey. It boldly imagines a future in which no hope remains, but in which the father and his son, "each the other's world entire," are sustained by love. Awesome in the totality of its vision, it is an unflinching meditation on the worst and the best that we are capable of: ultimate destructiveness, desperate tenacity, and the tenderness that keeps two people alive in the face of total devastation.
Customer Rating: 



Review Summary: This book epitomizes redundancy
Review: I was so excited to read this book. I've read a couple other of McCarthy's works and I think he's a phenomenal writer. He proves with The Road that stylistically, he's still a king. His dialogue, as always, is very blunt and tongue-in-cheek. It's flatness may turn a few people off, but I love it.
So how disappointed am I to have finished the book and read a story about....almost nothing? Very disappointed. At first, I thought, "A post-apocalyptic world? Cannibals? A father and son attempting to survive in a bleak world? Sign me up!" Unfortunately, the themes and atom-thin plot could have been written in a potent 20 page story. Instead, McCarthy subjects us to 287 pages of a father and a son walking around the barren world, finding food, sleeping, fashioning tools and fires, walking around more, finding more food, sleeping more, and repeat until the books end. Occasionally, they run into another survivor, sometimes an innocent person, sometimes a crazy group of cannibals that would love to munch on the father and son for dinner. But this makes up about 30 of the 287 pages.
Several negative reviews talk about this book being too depressing to like. That is a terrible reason not to like this book (or any book), so here are a few reasons not to like this book:
- Almost no characterization. Who are these people? I don't know and I guess I never will.
- Almost no plot. A plot is supposed to set up the routine of the world of the story and then break this routine. This routine isn't broken until the last 5 pages of the book.
- Almost no backstory. I don't need an explanation on how the world ended. It wouldn't hurt, though. But more importantly, what about the lives of the characters before this catastrophe? Give me a reason to care about them, cause I sure didn't when I read this.
All in all, this is the most pointless, superfluous book I've ever read. I love literature. I'm not much for genre fiction. But a book, ANY book must have the basic elements of story and character to be interesting. The Road is just a few interesting themes told in a most uninteresting way. Unbelievable that this won the Pulitzer.
Customer Rating: 



Review Summary: Morbid and depressing
Review: Endearing? Hopeful? This is what people got out of the book? Wow, it sucked the life out of me and just about ruined my day. It's written well and flows smooth and fast. But, it's about the most heartbreaking book I've ever read. Reminds me of Schindlers list w/o the humanity. If you feel like you're just too happy, then read this, it will surely take all the joy away.
Customer Rating: 



Review Summary: A rare prosaic masterpiece, couldn't put it down
Review: Not since reading J.M. Coatzee's Disgrace have I found a writer's prose to be painfully good. Cormac Mcarthy's The Road is such a book. Sentences as stark, poignant and emotionally raw as the bleak and barren world they describe. The book is essentially a long poem, which, dark as the tale may be, at times reads as more of an ode to some humans' ability to find beauty and goodness in the darkest of times. An odyssey of a father and son caught in a near-post human world, there is scarcely a joyful moment in the entire book. And yet there is a truthful kind of hope in the familial bond and in the struggle for goodness, whether that goodness is a cultural construct or something greater (Mcarthy leaves it ambiguous).
For me, the book was a potent wake up call, the sort that we need everyday in an era of nuclear weapons, global warming, resource scarcity. It's unclear how the world came to be the way it is in "The Road" - a landscape full of ash and nearly completely dead - and the sad truth is that the reader can find any number of probable scenarios that could have made it that way, scenarios that don't seem so far-fetched.
I could write much more about The Road: its meditations on death, on nihilism, on memory and love, but like most great literature, dissecting it would cheapen it. I think it is an essential story for our times. I look forward to the film.
Customer Rating: 



Review Summary: Literary Affectation or Simple Laziness?
Review: Not using quotation marks to denote dialog is either a literary affectation or simple laziness.
Mr. Mac should grow up and write like an adult already.
:/
Customer Rating: 



Review Summary: Master of deception
Review: All along the book, you're waiting for something to happen. Suspens is at its climax all the time but in the end...well nothing. This couple just go from luck to luck, they should probably have played loto.
All right, the bonds between a father and his child are very well described but apart from that, I found the book pretty empty. The reflexion the father has on his life, on what happens is not even that deep after all and they just are lucky on their trip, finding food just when they needed it the most. รด fortunate!
Well in a word, the book could have been great and has some sparks of greatness but it is definitely missing a little something.