Stella Maris by Cormac McCarthy
190 pages, Hardcover
December, 2022 by Knopf
A longer more fully thought-out NOPE than my original NOPE...
“Talking
is just recording what you’re thinking. It’s not the thing itself. When
I’m talking to you some separate part of my mind is composing what I’m
about to say. But it’s not yet in the form of words. So what is it in
the form of? There’s certainly no sense of some homunculus whispering to
us the words we’re about to say. Aside from raising the spectre of an
infinite regress—as in who is whispering to the whisperer—it raises the
question of a language of thought. Part of the general puzzle of how we
get from the mind to the world. A hundred billion synaptic events
clicking away in the dark like blind ladies.”
A benefit of being
an author whom most consider one of the greatest alive is getting to say
“fuck it,” with complete abandon. In Stephen King, it ends up with
books like Duma Key or Lisey’s Story that as much as love King you
couldn’t pay me to finish. The success at the box office for Ari Aster
recently resulted in Beau is Afraid a movie that is either a 3-hour
masterpiece or an arthouse wank fest depending on who you ask.
I
can’t imagine being an editor on a Cormac McCarthy book as he has zero
fucks to give for grammar, but that is nothing new. For decades he has
shrugged off quotation marks and even periods. I admit that is the one
that kills me sometimes. I don’t know how many times I tell my special
needs students if you like it put a period on it. I think if I said that
to Uncle Cormac he would just point silently at his Pulitzer Prize. Or
just Fuck off.
Fair.
Stella Mars is a companion book to
The Passenger, a more proper novel that I reviewed in February. I admit
much of the story has escaped my brain. When a co-worker asked me what
it was about I glibly said “Oppenheimer’s bastard son is a deep sea
diver, he takes this gig that was more interesting than all the soul
searching that happens in the second half.” The thing was I was entirely
sure that was accurate as my memory of the book is fuzzy.
The
best thing about The Passenger was the pages when the dialogue took
over. Bobby would have a back and forth, there would funny phrases and
some gem about the destructive nature of our species would sneak in and
give me the feeling I was peeking at a universal truth.
Stella
Mars was all that. It was an entire book about a character and his
doctor at a psychiatric hospital. 181 pages of dialogue, no speech tags,
no quotation marks. No action, no description. It was just like my
favorite moments in The Passenger but the whole book. The first 30 pages
I was totally in, but it became like eating nothing but peanut butter
and chocolate for a week straight.
That said there were still gems…
If you had to say something definitive about the world in a single sentence what would that sentence be?
It would be this: the world has created no living thing that it does not intend to destroy.
Or…
Music
is made out of nothing but some fairly simple rules . . . The notes
themselves amount to almost nothing. But why some particular arrangement
of these notes should have such a profound effect on our emotions is a
mystery beyond even the hope of comprehension.
So you see this is
a two-star book for me with 5 stars moments. Much like Beauty or the
new Ari Aster movie Stella Mars is an experience in the eye of the
beholder. These eyes beheld the short book in small bursts over two
weeks, and still, they wandered. I started other books, lost interest,
and ultimately didn’t care. Bummer. He is still one of the GOATs.
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