
The Crossing
by Cormac McCarthy
Billy Parham, sixteen, traps a pregnant wolf in New Mexico and decides to return her to Mexico — three journeys across the border over a decade, each one costing more than the last.
Check Price on Amazon (paid link)American · b. 1933
Pulitzer Prize (2007), National Book Award (1992), PEN/Saul Bellow Award
Cormac McCarthy was an American novelist whose unsparing, biblically cadenced prose made him one of the most celebrated and challenging writers of the twentieth century.
Cormac McCarthy spent decades writing largely outside mainstream attention before Blood Meridian, published in 1985, began to build his literary reputation among readers willing to engage with its extraordinary, terrifying vision. Set on the Texas-Mexico border in the 1840s, it follows a band of scalp hunters into an ever-deepening descent into violence, presided over by the Judge, one of the most compelling — and most debated — villains in American fiction. The novel’s prose, stripped of conventional punctuation and soaked in biblical cadence, reads unlike anything else. It is a brutal, demanding book that rewards close reading with real philosophical depth.
All the Pretty Horses, the first of the Border Trilogy, is more accessible — a coming-of-age story of a Texas teenager who crosses into Mexico in 1949 with his friend, only to find the romantic world of the cowboy already fading. No Country for Old Men is McCarthy at his most controlled and contemporary, a cat-and-mouse thriller in which a welding war veteran stumbles onto drug money in the Texas desert and is hunted by the implacable Anton Chigurh. The novel is terse and relentless; its ending refuses the consolations the genre usually provides. The Road, his Pulitzer Prize winner, follows a father and son across a post-apocalyptic America in prose of extraordinary bleakness and love.
McCarthy is not a writer for all tastes. His female characters are often peripheral, his violence can feel like an end in itself rather than a means, and his refusal of sentimentality can shade into coldness. But his command of the language, his moral seriousness, and his ability to inhabit American landscape and darkness put him in a small group of twentieth-century novelists who genuinely extended what the form could do.

by Cormac McCarthy
Billy Parham, sixteen, traps a pregnant wolf in New Mexico and decides to return her to Mexico — three journeys across the border over a decade, each one costing more than the last.
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by Cormac McCarthy
In 1949, sixteen-year-old John Grady Cole rides into Mexico with his friend Rawlins, seeking the last of the old West and finding love, violence, and the end of innocence.
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by Cormac McCarthy
The conclusion of the Border Trilogy — John Grady Cole and Billy Parham are both working on a New Mexico cattle ranch in the early 1950s when John Grady falls in love with Magdalena, an epileptic prostitute across the border in Juárez.
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by Cormac McCarthy
A welder stumbles on a drug deal gone wrong in the Texas desert and takes the money, setting off a chain of pursuit involving a psychopathic killer and an aging sheriff who can no longer understand the world he patrols.
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by Cormac McCarthy
A father and son journey through a post-apocalyptic American landscape toward the coast, carrying the fire of their humanity against a world that has been stripped of it.
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by Cormac McCarthy
A nameless teenager joins a gang of mercenary scalp-hunters in the 1850s Southwest, entering a world of almost incomprehensible violence presided over by the monstrous Judge Holden.
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by Cormac McCarthy
Alicia Western, Bobby's sister, checks herself into a psychiatric facility in Wisconsin in 1972. The entire novel is her dialogues with her psychiatrist: mathematics, consciousness, the nature of reality, and her decision to die.
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by Cormac McCarthy
Bobby Western, a salvage diver in 1980s New Orleans, investigates a sunken plane where a passenger is missing from the manifest — and finds himself pursued. Alternating with Bobby's story are his dead sister Alicia's hallucinatory visions.
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Where to start with Cormac McCarthy — whether to begin with The Road, No Country for Old Men, Blood Meridian, or All the Pretty Horses. A complete reading guide.
guide
Cormac McCarthy wrote twelve novels across six decades, from Appalachian Gothic to the Pulitzer Prize-winning The Road. This guide covers the complete bibliography, the two phases of his career, and where new readers should begin.
list
If Cormac McCarthy's The Road left you wrecked and searching for more, these dark, beautiful novels share its emotional weight.
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