The Scotsman

How Cormac Mccarthy’s Blood Meridian serves as a guide to living a better life

◆ The author argues the only true tangibles in life are human relationsh­ips

- Joseph Anderson Joseph Anderson is Health Correspond­ent at The Scotsman

Cormac Mccarthy’s great American anti-novel, Blood Meridian, is a book dripping with blood, nihilism and indifferen­ce towards human suffering – but within the book’s desert setting lies several oases of wisdom and spiritual guidance.

The 1985 novel, which sometimes devolves into a rambling stream-ofconsciou­sness similar to Kerouac or Hunter S Thompson, follows an unnamed protagonis­t who navigates a world of male violence, competitio­n and conquest in the American-mexican borderland­s in the mid 19th-century.

He escapes the clutches of his abusive father and flees into the world of the American west, where he eventually falls in with John Joel Glanton’s gang

– a band of scalp hunters hired by the Mexican Government to hunt violent Apaches, but whose extreme nihilism and selfishnes­s leads them to scalp any human being who crosses their path.

Among their group is “Judge” Holden, a giant, hairless and pale man. He is learned, can speak several languages and play any musical instrument. He is also a child killer, who is heavily implied to be the devil himself by several characters, and the main vehicle of Mccarthy’s existentia­lism.

“The truth about the world,” the Judge says, “is that anything is possible.

“Had you not seen it all from birth and thereby bled it of its strangenes­s it would appear to you for what it is, a hat trick in a medicine show, a fevered dream, a trance bepopulate with chimeras having neither analogue nor precedent.”

He continues: “Even in this world more things exist without our knowledge than with it and the order in creation which you see is that which you have put there, like a string in a maze, so that you will not lose your way.”

The string in the maze highlights the absurdity of careers, religions and mortgages on a strange rock hurtling through space. Human society and the expectatio­ns it places on you are meaningles­s, argues Mccarthy, who passed away last year.

The only true tangibles in life are human relationsh­ips – love and caring – and simple pleasures.

Blood Meridian reminds us that life is chaotic and prone to end at any moment – so live it pursuing life itself.

 ?? ?? Cormac Mccarthy reminds us that life is chaotic and prone to end at any moment
Cormac Mccarthy reminds us that life is chaotic and prone to end at any moment

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