Suttree

Cormac MCCARTHY

Item#: 102345 We're sorry, this item has been sold

Suttree

AN “ABSOLUTELY OVERPOWERING USE OF LANGUAGE” (SAUL BELLOW): FIRST EDITION OF CORMAC MCCARTHY’S FOURTH NOVEL, SUTTREE

MCCARTHY, Cormac. Suttree. New York: Random House, (1979). Octavo, original half black cloth, original dust jacket.

Scarce first edition of the novel many consider McCarthy’s greatest, whose protagonist, “part Stephen Daedalus, part Prince Hal… is also McCarthy, the willful outcast” (New York Times).

McCarthy's novels owe much to Faulkner's, especially in their "use of dialect and concrete sense of the world—a debt McCarthy doesn't dispute. 'The ugly fact is books are made out of books,' he says. 'The novel depends for its life on the novels that have been written'… Saul Bellow, who sat on the committee that in 1981 awarded him a MacArthur Fellowship, the so-called genius grant, exclaims over his 'absolutely overpowering use of language, his life-giving and death-dealing sentences.'" Suttree, considered by many to be McCarthy's finest novel, "has a sensitive and mature protagonist, unlike any other in McCarthy's work, who ekes out a living on a houseboat… part Stephen Daedalus, part Prince Hal—he is also McCarthy, the willful outcast" (New York Times). Although his fourth novel to be published, McCarthy began work on Suttree well before his first, The Orchard Keeper, was published in 1965. Small remainder mark on bottom of text block, as often.

A fine copy.

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