Book description
NATIONAL BESTSELLER • WINNER OF THE PULITZER PRIZE • A searing, post-apocalyptic novel about a father and son's fight to survive, this "tale of survival and the miracle of goodness only adds to McCarthy's stature as a living master. It's gripping, frightening and, ultimately, beautiful" (San Francisco Chronicle).
A father…
Why read it?
36 authors picked The Road as one of their favorite books. Why do they recommend it?
I love this book because it explores the end of the world in the most intimate and emotional way possible.
What moved me deeply was not the apocalypse itself, but the quiet relationship between father and son, trying to preserve goodness in a world where goodness no longer seems to matter. I felt a constant weight while reading, as if hope itself was fragile and rare.
It made me reflect on what it truly means to carry faith and humanity when everything else is gone.
From P.E.N.'s list on where biblical myth meets philosophical apocalyptic fiction.
I was first introduced to the film adaptation of The Road in my early teens when I went through all five stages of grief in the span of 1 hour and 51 minutes.
I then made a beeline to the bookstore for a copy of McCarthy’s novel, which subsequently solidified my love of end-of-the-world stories in how they can examine what it means to survive.
The Road is a story that has stayed with me over the subsequent decade and a half and greatly influenced my post-apocalyptic novel.
From Corey's list on end of the world books.
Though not a horror novel, The Road's bleak premise shook me to my core.
McCarthy was one of the best American writers ever, and his ability to force you to read every word pulled you so deep into the story you could swear you were a part of it. His vision of dystopia is so grounded it felt all too believable, which means when the cannibals come hunting, you will sleep with the lights on.
From Carter's list on scary books that make me wonder "what would I do?".
If you love The Road...
In a sense, this story is very simple: In just about the worst conceivable circumstances, a father strives desperately to find a way for a better life—and even a chance at life—for the son he loves deeply, and he is constantly ready and willing to sacrifice his own comfort and safety (what little there is) to attain that goal. The simple yet difficult obstacles to this, as the two travel on foot across a landscape devastated by a nuclear holocaust, prevent the story from becoming an emotionally manipulative tear-jerker. There is beauty and horror here. As in Blood Meridian, McCarthy…
Cormac McCarthy delivers once again with "The Road". He is one of my favorite authors with his gritty prose. This story is visceral and evokes so much in the reader. Be prepared to feel it.
Cormac McCarthy does the impossible in this book—he writes an emotionally satisfying, literary-minded travelogue of horrors. It shatters the reader but then lifts them up with its beautifully wrought prose.
Be patient: the novel gets brutally dark before the light.
From Stephen's list on dystopian and sci-fantasy novels.
If you love Cormac McCarthy...
I read this book twice: once for the story and once to explore the post-apocalyptic landscape. The story is beautifully written, engaging, and tender.
But when I read it for the second time, I found many interesting ideas lurking in the background. I remember some of the scenes from this book so vividly that the locations feel like places I’ve been.
I love (!) discussing the ending and pondering the motives of all the characters on the periphery of the narrative.
From M.'s list on stories we tell at the end of the world.
At the time, when I read this book, I’d just become a father. Naturally, the story about a father trying to protect his son in a harsh dystopian world was captivating for me and still is to this day.
I loved the book's gritty realism and felt as if I were walking beside the characters during the entire journey. I also found McCarthy’s writing style unique and something new from the best-selling paperbacks I’d often read before picking up his book.
This father and son duo set up residence in my heart.
I recall some scenes with such clarity that I still see them that way, even after subsequently watching the movie. Imagine having the sum of your possessions piled up in a shopping cart, and you’re on the road, excruciatingly aware that at any point, everything you have could be taken from you, including your loved ones.
If that thought doesn’t inspire a bout of enthusiastic wall-worshipping, then maybe you should read the book.
From C.L.'s list on dystopian novels to make you cling to your duvet and worship your walls.
If you love The Road...
Love would be the wrong word. This book scared the hell out of me.
I read this book when it first came out in 2006, before it had won the Pulitzer and the James Tait Black prizes, and there are still passages and scenes that haunt me to this day. This is one of the bleakest portrayals of what happens when civilisation collapses that I have read.
The Road is set in a near future affected by some unnamed cataclysm. McCarthy starts hard and does not let up until the last page when he throws us a flicker of hope…
From Paul's list on dystopian worlds of our own making.
If you love The Road...
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