Post by account_disabled on Dec 10, 2023 6:56:49 GMT
Wild Horses is an example of a historical novel set in modern times. I talked about this sort of pursuit of the two boys, an escape from the mother country towards a poorer, more backward and therefore perhaps more historic country. A search for the ancient, for a beloved era that is disappearing forever. McCarthy's novel demonstrates that this antiquity can also be found in the modern, that it is possible to make the past resurface where the past has not yet become present. Wild Horses is a sort of still image on the screen of Time, a living picture in which the scene is constantly evolving, advancing in space without aging.
Unleash surprise in the reader Cormac McCarthy surprises the reader with continuous twists. Cavalli Selvaggi is indeed a fluid narrative, but the reader never knows what to expect. The attention does not Phone Number Datawane, because at the right moment there is something that intervenes, call it destiny if you want, but everything, in the story written by McCarthy, can trigger an alternative path to the one prepared by those who live that story. The two protagonists are not masters of their destiny and their choices will always have to clash with what they encounter.
Wild Horses teaches a writer that a novel can be written without plots and without losing quality and involvement. The guide of the entire story is John Grady Cole, one of the protagonists, but in the sense that we observe the events through his eyes. Neither he nor the reader will ever know, page after page, what will happen. The choices are up to him, but the consequences of those choices are established by a destiny that is higher up, which does not run like a wild horse, but stands by and watches like the sun that warms and burns those border lands.
Unleash surprise in the reader Cormac McCarthy surprises the reader with continuous twists. Cavalli Selvaggi is indeed a fluid narrative, but the reader never knows what to expect. The attention does not Phone Number Datawane, because at the right moment there is something that intervenes, call it destiny if you want, but everything, in the story written by McCarthy, can trigger an alternative path to the one prepared by those who live that story. The two protagonists are not masters of their destiny and their choices will always have to clash with what they encounter.
Wild Horses teaches a writer that a novel can be written without plots and without losing quality and involvement. The guide of the entire story is John Grady Cole, one of the protagonists, but in the sense that we observe the events through his eyes. Neither he nor the reader will ever know, page after page, what will happen. The choices are up to him, but the consequences of those choices are established by a destiny that is higher up, which does not run like a wild horse, but stands by and watches like the sun that warms and burns those border lands.