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- <text id=94TT0741>
- <title>
- Jun. 06, 1994: Profile:The Knock at the Door
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
- Jun. 06, 1994 The Man Who Beat Hitler
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- THE ARTS & MEDIA/PROFILE, Page 62
- The Knock at the Door
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p> Fame comes calling on Cormac McCarthy, but he's hiding out in
- order to write his violent, exquisite novels
- </p>
- <p>By Gregory Jaynes/El Paso
- </p>
- <p> When Cormac McCarthy's sixth novel, All the Pretty Horses, won
- the National Book Award last year, journalists naturally wanted
- a word with the author. McCarthy possesses a lifelong habit
- of refusing questions, however. As a Texas lawyer buddy says,
- "He solicits publicity like a man evading process." A prestigious
- literary honor did nothing to change his mind; for that matter,
- he didn't go pick up the award. It made for a good story all
- the same. Here was a man with a fine hand with the language
- and a clear scope on the darkness out there, an impoverished
- artist on the high rim of his middle years, a writer whose books
- until Horses had never sold more than 2,500 copies in hard-cover,
- and here, with recognition and cash at last on his cheap tin
- plate, he wouldn't talk.
- </p>
- <p> As a result, the press in many cases diminished McCarthy's great
- value by making him out to be some sort of hermit caballero
- and by all but ignoring his remarkable prose. Not that any of
- it bothered him enough to respond. He just kept working, and
- this week bookstores are receiving copies of The Crossing (Knopf;
- 426 pages; $23), the centerpiece in a trilogy that began with
- Horses. The hero of that book was a boy ahoof in Mexico in 1950,
- to whom it was easy to give your heart. The Crossing moves two
- orphaned brothers on horseback across the same spare terrain,
- this time just before World War II. Violence, raw land, unlettered
- people, love, loss and a throat-slit dog have something to do
- with the new narrative; or you could say it is about that mean
- crossing from child to man, told as cleanly as you'll find.
- </p>
- <p> But don't expect to hear McCarthy talking about it. It does
- the heart good to report one of life's little constants: he
- still won't speak. With basically one exception, McCarthy has
- never drummed for himself. The exception came with the publication
- of Horses two years ago. At the time McCarthy was 58 and unknown
- outside a small mob of readers, quite a few of them critics,
- English professors or writers, who thought he was God. Being
- God didn't pay spit, though, and after five books and 30 years,
- McCarthy had his first agent, Amanda Urban, and a new editor,
- Gary Fisketjon, two of publishing's more glamorous figures.
- They impressed upon him the idea that a little publicity never
- hurt. "It was very simple," Fisketjon remembers. "He had no
- interest in it." They leaned on him. "He said, `If you start
- making exceptions...' He said, finally, `If it will help--and I trust you in thinking it will help--but never again.'"
- </p>
- <p> McCarthy allowed the New York Times to seek him out in El Paso,
- where he hangs his hat more days than not, but the paper didn't
- gain much purchase on the novelist. Meanwhile, due in the main
- to old-fashioned word of mouth, All the Pretty Horses broke
- free, sold some, won some awards and was acquired by Mike Nichols
- for the movies. The author bought a new pickup truck, set to
- work on The Crossing and clammed up.
- </p>
- <p> Here, then, is what we know of Cormac McCarthy: He was the eldest
- of six children. His father was a lawyer for the Tennessee Valley
- Authority in Knoxville. He didn't feel he fit in his family
- or his schools. He tried the University of Tennessee twice and
- the U.S. Air Force once. He married a young woman from college
- named Lee Holleman, the first of his two wives, and they had
- a son, Cullen, who is an architect in Spain. The elder McCarthy's
- first book was The Orchard Keeper, an unsentimental, striking,
- powerful, lovely commemorative to a gone way of life in the
- old Tennessee hills that ended so portentously it made you want
- to snatch Faulkner from the grave and choke him for his influence.
- </p>
- <p> McCarthy got some grant money for The Orchard Keeper--the
- William Faulkner Foundation, the Rockefeller Foundation, the
- American Academy of Arts and Letters--and there is no account
- of his having hit a lick at anything but novel writing since.
- His second wife, Anne de Lisle, recalls living in a barn with
- him outside Knoxville for eight years, bathing outdoors, eating
- beans, her husband rejecting $2,000 offers to speak at universities
- because everything he had to say was available in those books
- that no one was buying. The repellent could have been subject
- matter, but then only a simpleton would think that Outer Dark
- (1968) was just about incest or Child of God (1974) just about
- necrophilia. More likely, the villain was the complexity of
- language and thought that refused to meet the reader halfway.
- </p>
- <p> McCarthy roved west in the early '70s, looking for a spot that
- hadn't been written out. The second Mrs. McCarthy wasn't invited
- along. Published words about the South were everywhere, thick
- as clematis on a mailbox. This border territory, though, offered
- room. And it came with a history. As McCarthy writes in his
- new novel, "A good deal of what could be seen in the world had
- passed this way. Armored Spaniards and hunters and trappers
- and grandees and their women and slaves and fugitives and armies
- and revolutions and the dead and dying. And all that was seen
- was told and all that was told was remembered."
- </p>
- <p> As he dug in and began to write in Texas, McCarthy's published
- work remained a hard slog for readers who couldn't cut through
- his syntactical thornbush, but in 1979 he brought out Suttree,
- apparently the last book set in the South he had in him, and
- it was rough, gnarly, funny as hell and, for the first time,
- accessible. Here is the novel on the Big Question:
- </p>
- <p> You told me once you believed in God.
- </p>
- <p> The old man waved his hand. Maybe, he said. I got no reason
- to think he believes in me. Oh I'd like to see him for a minute
- if I could.
- </p>
- <p> What would you say to him?
- </p>
- <p> Well, I think I'd just tell him. I'd say: Wait a minute. Wait
- just one minute before you start in on me. Before you say anything,
- there's just one thing I'd like to know. And he'll say: What's
- that? And then I'm goin to ast him: What did you have me in
- that crapgame down there for anyway? I couldn't put any part
- of it together.
- </p>
- <p> Suttree smiled. What do you think he'll say?
- </p>
- <p> The ragpicker spat and wiped his mouth. I don't believe he can
- answer it, he said. I don't believe there is an answer.
- </p>
- <p> The MacArthur Foundation got wind of McCarthy about the time
- Suttree was coming along, and in 1981 he was awarded one of
- its genius grants. Shelby Foote said, "I told the MacArthur
- people that he would be honoring them as much as they were honoring
- him." Saul Bellow mentioned his "absolutely overpowering use
- of language, his life-giving and death-dealing sentences." Part
- of the grant money went to free the author from tumbledown motels:
- he bought a dog-eared little stone-and-stucco affair the color
- of mayonnaise left out too long, a dirt yard out front and no
- space in back to speak of, on Coffin Avenue.
- </p>
- <p> In 1985 McCarthy brought out Blood Meridian, an apocalyptic
- epic, his Moby Dick, about a scalp hunter in the 1840s; to read
- it is to say goodbye to peace. Few did read it. McCarthy continued
- to live close to the bone in El Paso, a close-to-the-bone kind
- of town, just across the Rio Grande from Juarez, Mexico. He
- golfed, shot pool, ate modest portions of simple food at a cafeteria
- nearby and at a clattery coffee shop, hung with a couple of
- lawyers, an artist, an academic and a Nobel-prizewinning physicist
- next door in New Mexico, saw some young women ("He's not a real
- terrible rounder," says a local gossip who knows him), let the
- natural world claim him and continued to produce world-class
- literature that somehow got sweeter-tempered, as though it had
- occurred to him that nasty dispositions were unattractive in
- a book.
- </p>
- <p> El Paso let him be until Horses made the best-seller lists and
- the local paper took stock of what was in town. Then came the
- dreaded rap at McCarthy's door. The reporter, Robert Nelson,
- young and just out of school in Nebraska, had been by four or
- five times, had knocked until his knuckles hurt, but no one
- had answered. This time a face, a high forehead, came moonlike
- to the black copper screen: "Who are you?"
- </p>
- <p> "Mr. McCarthy, my name is Bob Nelson, and I'm with the El Paso
- Times, and I wanted to know if there was any chance you would
- spend any time with me or in any way let me write anything about
- you."
- </p>
- <p> "I can't do that, Bob." The door stayed shut, deadbolted.
- </p>
- <p> "Would you play golf with me or something?"
- </p>
- <p> "Oh, don't do this."
- </p>
- <p> "All right, I tried."
- </p>
- <p> "Yes, you did."
- </p>
- <p> Bob Nelson went away--went back to Lincoln, Nebraska, in fact,
- after a brief tour with the newspaper. A year passed, and then
- the other day a Fleet Street reporter took a run at McCarthy
- at Luby's Cafeteria, where he sat with his coffee and his soup
- and his periodicals. "I'm sorry, son," said McCarthy, "but you're
- asking me to do something I just can't do."
- </p>
- <p> With every good wish, this correspondent drove past the Casa
- McCarthy this morning, waved so long and hollered hasta luego.
- </p>
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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