Unguessed Kinships

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All the Pretty Horses
All the Pretty Horses trilogy
American fiction
American literature
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Blood Meridian
Books turned into films
Border fiction
Border trilogy
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Cormac McCarthy
Dark novels
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Geography and fiction
Gnosticism and fiction
Greek philosophy and fiction
Literary realism
Literature of the American South
Literature of the American West
Literature of the South
Literature of the West
Maps in fiction
Mazes in fiction
Most important American writers
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Naturalism
Nietzsche and fiction
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No Country for Old Men
Novels about Manifest Destiny
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Suttree
The Road
Vereen Bell
Violent novels
Writers like Jack London
Writers like Stephen Crane

Product details

  • ISBN 9780817321536
  • Weight: 272g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 25 Apr 2023
  • Publisher: The University of Alabama Press
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Hardback
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The values of literary naturalism at play in one of America’s most visionary novelists

It took six novels and nearly thirty years for Cormac McCarthy to find commercial success with the National Book Award–winning All the Pretty Horses, followed by major prizes, more best sellers, and Hollywood adaptations of his work. Those successes, though, have obscured McCarthy’s commitment to an older form of literary expression: naturalism.

It is hardly a secret that McCarthy’s work tends to darker themes: violence, brutality, the cruel indifference of nature, themes which would not be out of place in the writing of Jack London or Stephen Crane. But literary naturalism is more than the oversimplified Darwinism that many think of. Nature may be red in tooth and claw, and humans are part of nature, but the humanity depicted in naturalist literature is capable of love, selflessness, and spirituality, as well.

In Unguessed Kinships, Steven Frye illuminates all these dimensions of McCarthy’s work. In his novels and plays, McCarthy engages both explicitly and obliquely with the project of manifest destiny, in the western drama Blood Meridian, the Tennessee Valley Authority-era Tennessee novels, and the atomic frontier of Alamogordo in Cities of the Plain. McCarthy’s concerns are deeply religious and philosophical, drawing on ancient Greek philosophy, Gnosticism, and Nietzsche, among other sources. Frye argues for McCarthy not merely as a naturalist writer but as a naturalist in the most expansive sense. Unguessed Kinships includes biographical and historical context in each chapter, widening the appeal of the text to not just naturalists or McCarthy scholars but anyone studying the literature of the South or the West.

Steven Frye is chair and professor of English at California State University, Bakersfield. He is author of Understanding Cormac McCarthy and Understanding Larry McMurtry. He is also editor of Cormac McCarthy in Context, The Cambridge Companion to the Literature of the American West, and The Cambridge Companion to Cormac McCarthy. He also serves as president of the Cormac McCarthy Society.

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