Friday, 21 October 2011

Quote

" I dont know what that would mean. What luck would look like. Who would know such a thing?"(McCarthy,174)

This quote happens as the old man is departing from the man and the boy. He will not wish them luck, because he does not believe in it. This may be due to the fact that in a harsh and desolate world such as this, there is no such thing as luck. When they first meet the man, he thinks them to be robbers, because maybe he has had no luck before, and been robbed and beaten. However, this quote is also quite ironic, because the old man did not believe in luck, yet he was lucky enough to meet the boy, and the man. they gave him dinner, a fire to be warm by, and even food for the road. There may be an absence of luck in this world, but if you wait long enough, it will come to you.

Tuesday, 18 October 2011

If I could have lunch with the author...

If I could have lunch with the author, and ask him any question, I would ask him about the setting. I would want to know where he got the idea from, whether he got it from a movie, or whether he got it from society, seeing what we are capable of doing to the world. I would also ask him what happened in the story, that the world ended up like that. When there is something concerning post apocalyptic, people almost always assume a nuclear war started it. However, it could be different. I would want to know whether it was mankinds fault what happened to the world, or if it was simply something natural that caused the world to be the way it is in the story.
If I knew what had caused the setting of the book, it would better my understanding of what each individual character went through, and what they had to see. It would help me understand their losses, and what they had to give up in order to survive. I think it would just make me enjoy the book more.

Q and A

The setting of my book is in a post apocalyptic world.

I think this is symbolic of how people can slowly destroy the world, until it ends up like the author portrays it.

I cannot believe that people actually resorted to cannibalism in order to survive.  I cannot believe that they were willing to eat a kid.

I do not trust the father when he lies to the son, because even though he is trying to protect him, it could backfire in the end.

My favourite part of the book so far is when the Man shoots the cannibal in the head, when he tries to hurt the boy.

I do not understand why the author did not explain why the world was the way it was. I would have preferred a back story at least.

If I could have lunch with the author, I would ask how he came up with the setting of the book.

Monday, 17 October 2011

Symbolism

There was something I read pretty early in the novel that I wanted to blog, but I did not get around to doing it, so I decided to go back to it. When the Man and the boy are in a supermarket, and they find a coke. They share it and both think that it is probably the last coke they will ever drink. When you read about it, it seems like some ancient piece of history that they find, kind of like someone discovering an ancient artifact from a different time. It also symbolizes how deprived the characters really are in that time. Today, we would take something like a coke for granted, because it is so readily available. For the Man and the boy however, food is scarce, and finding a coke seems like a once in a lifetime opportunity.

Wednesday, 5 October 2011

Quotes

"They squatted in the road and ate cold rice and cold beans that they'd cooked days ago. Already beginning to ferment."( pg 27, McCarthy).
I really liked this quote, because people today take things for granted, like food. We complain about not having anything nice to eat for lunch, or complain about what we had for dinner the night before. In The Road, these two characters are struggling for survival, eating what they can, when they can scavenge it. They eat beans and rice that has started to go off without any complaint, because it is at least edible. It takes something really big, like the world ending, or something tragic for people to actually realise what they have, and appreciate it.

"On this road there are no godspoke men. They are gone and I am left and they have taken with them the world." ( pg 32, McCarthy)
I think that this quote means that on the road, there are no more religious, or faithful mean. I think that by now everyone has pretty much abandoned hope that god will save them, and they have accepted the harsh realities of their world. Saying that they left, and took the world with them, could possibly infer that there was some sort of religious influence in what happened to the world. It could also mean that when the world died, so did all the religion, meaning a symbolic death, not necessarily a literary death of all religious men.

Tuesday, 4 October 2011

Getting Started

Last night I started to read my book. The very first thing I noticed, there was a lot of night imagery, and talk about winter. I saw the movie before I started reading, so I have a general idea of what is going on. This night and winter imagery could be foreshadowing something ominous coming. It could also signify that the world is coming to an end, it is now in its ending phase.

Another thing I noticed, that it is not like other books. When ever there is dialogue, it is not typed in quotations like in other novels. It is directly typed into the paragraphs. This is a little weird to me, as I am used to it being the other way. I am sure that I will get the hang of it, it's just a different way of reading