Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Cormac Mccarthy returns with cryptic ‘Passenger’

- By Rob Merrill

It’s been 16 years since Cormac Mccarthy released “The Road” and won the Pulitzer Prize for fiction, cementing his reputation as a master American novelist. Plenty of time, then, to write two books for fans to savor in 2022.

The first, “The Passenger,” is out now, and while it has that traditiona­l Mccarthy style (spare prose, few commas and adjectives, scant apostrophe­s, and no quotation marks to tell you who’s talking), it is nothing if not original. It’s difficult to summarize the plot, but the protagonis­t is a guy with a great name, Bobby Western.

The novel begins in Mississipp­i in 1980 as Bobby, working as a salvage diver, sits on a Coast Guard boat about to explore the wreckage of a plane crash below the surface. We learn there’s a passenger from the manifest whose body is not on board and the black box is missing. But this is definitely not a mystery novel. If you turn the pages hoping for answers, you won’t find them.

What you will find are deep discussion­s about quantum mechanics, God, the atomic bomb, who killed JFK, and of course, love. We learn Bobby’s younger sister, Alicia, was a child mathematic­s prodigy, who while studying for her doctorate at the University of Chicago years ago, committed herself to a mental hospital named Stella Maris in Wisconsin before killing herself. (“Stella Maris” is also the name of the companion novel to be published Dec. 6.) We learn their father and mother both worked on the Manhattan Project. Oh, and we learn the siblings loved each other. Incestuous­ly? That’s unclear. But it certainly haunts them both.

Alicia is diagnosed as schizophre­nic, visited by various “chimeras.” She merits her own chapters, all in italics, during which she converses with those hallucinat­ions.

If that all sounds like a lot, you’re right. It’s difficult to follow at times, in part because the secondary characters are barely introduced. Someone is looking for Bobby — because of the plane crash? Because of his parentage? — and he avoids detection by wandering through the South talking philosophy and cars and nuclear annihilati­on with people from his past and present as we stitch together his story.

Reading “Stella Maris” will help some. Taking the form of transcript­s between Alicia and her doctor, it’s formatted as a series of interviews with the patient, set eight years before the events of “The Passenger.” But Alicia is not just any patient. Like her brother, she thinks deeply about everything and shares it all with Dr. Robert Cohen. The only thing she won’t delve into too deeply? Bobby.

At 89, Mccarthy still has plenty to say. Both books ruminate on consciousn­ess, what it truly means to be alive, and whether there are universal truths that govern the world. And while it’s fair not to expect answers to questions so big, some readers will wonder why the stories have to be so cryptic.

 ?? ?? “The Passenger” by Cormac Mccarthy (Knopf, $30)
“The Passenger” by Cormac Mccarthy (Knopf, $30)

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