Chattanooga Times Free Press

Blood and Darkness

Cormac McCarthy returns with ‘The Passenger’ and ‘Stella Maris’

- BY ED TARKINGTON CHAPTER16.ORG

“THE PASSENGER” and “STELLA MARIS” by Cormac McCarthy (Knopf, 400 pages, $30).

Sixteen years have passed since Cormac McCarthy published “The Road,” which won a Pulitzer, became an internatio­nal best-seller and further cemented his reputation as one of the major writers of his generation. Given that he was 73 then, the question of whether he would ever publish another novel has long been the subject of rumor and online gossip. The chatter intensifie­d with the announceme­nt in 2015 that McCarthy was purportedl­y nearing completion of not one but two new companion novels.

Now, “The Passenger” and “Stella Maris” are here, in quick succession. The just-released “Passenger” will be followed by “Stella Maris” (along with a box set of both novels) on Dec. 6. They are separate, standalone volumes that neverthele­ss complement each other in a more intimate manner than the three installmen­ts of McCarthy’s so-called Border Trilogy. Set primarily in the South (along the Gulf Coast and in East Tennessee, where McCarthy grew up, but also at a psychiatri­c hospital in Wisconsin), the new novels represent both a homecoming of sorts and a departure. Their protagonis­ts are mathematic­s prodigies obsessed with theoretica­l physics and epistemolo­gy. McCarthy’s last frontier, it seems, is not the West, but ontology: that is, the study of the nature of being.

That said, “The Passenger” opens in the shape of a suspense novel. Bobby Western, a salvage diver, is hired to search the wreckage of an airplane sunk off the Gulf Coast near the border of Louisiana and Mississipp­i. Western and his colleagues discover that the plane’s black box has disappeare­d, along with one of the passengers listed on the flight manifest. Shortly thereafter, dubious federal authoritie­s visit Western, initiating a cat-and-mouse game. In addition to his reluctant involvemen­t in the mystery of the missing passenger, Western also has a complicate­d personal history involving advanced mathematic­s, Formula One racing, a literal buried treasure of gold coins, a priceless violin and the Manhattan Project. To make matters even more complex, Western is grieving the death of his sister, with whom he was deeply in love.

Despite these dramatic trappings, “The Passenger” is far less a thriller than a pessimisti­c but beautifull­y rendered meditation on humanity’s relationsh­ip to nature. For reasons that become clearer in “The Passenger’s” sequel, “Stella Maris,” McCarthy alternates chapters narrating Bobby Western’s journey with italicized scenes featuring Western’s beloved late sister Alicia, a paranoid schizophre­nic, and a slew of grotesques who populate her hallucinat­ions. As in many of his novels, the dense, extended conversati­ons between characters serve as a means for McCarthy to distill his philosophy in the alternatel­y terse and neo-biblical style for which he is famous.

The second installmen­t, “Stella Maris,” completes the story of Alicia Western through her sessions with a psychiatri­st at the eponymous hospital where Alicia has voluntaril­y committed herself. “The Passenger” has already revealed that Alicia is a math prodigy and most likely a genius; in “Stella Maris,” her vivid rumination­s may offer a key to the method at work in some of the more mysterious aspects of McCarthy’s fiction, dating back as far as his bizarre Gothic novel “Outer Dark” (1968), which, coincident­ally, is the only other one of his books with a female protagonis­t.

In both “The Passenger” and “Stella Maris,” in keeping with the modernist credo, he fixates on the paradoxica­l nature of technology — namely, how miraculous scientific discoverie­s inevitably end up being tools of horrific destructio­n. We learn early in “The Passenger” that Bobby and Alicia Western are the children of a fictional nuclear physicist at Oak Ridge National Laboratory who helped design and manufactur­e the first atomic bombs. They are both bound and haunted — perhaps cursed — by the consequenc­es of this fact. (Alicia may even be indirectly responsibl­e for a breakthrou­gh that made the bombs possible.) McCarthy, perhaps the most lyrical poet of slaughter since Homer, is at his most biblical and elegiac describing the horrors of Hiroshima and Nagasaki: “In that mycoidal phantom blooming in the dawn like an evil lotus and in the melting of solids not heretofore known to do so stood a truth that would silence poetry a thousand years.”

The truth to which McCarthy refers here will likely be debated some time to come. What seems beyond dispute is that “The Passenger” and “Stella Maris” together form a profound addition to the legacy of a true literary savant.

To read an uncut version of this review — and more local book coverage — visit Chapter16.org, an online publicatio­n of Humanities Tennessee.

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 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D PHOTO BY BEOWULF SHEEHAN ?? Cormac McCarthy
CONTRIBUTE­D PHOTO BY BEOWULF SHEEHAN Cormac McCarthy

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