Meridian- Or The Evening Redness In The West - Blood
Don’t expect character arcs or redemption. The kid drifts from atrocity to atrocity. There are no heroes, no moral lessons delivered, and no justice. The ending (especially the infamous "jakes" scene) is famously ambiguous and horrifying.
Here’s a concise review of Blood Meridian; or, The Evening Redness in the West by Cormac McCarthy. A masterpiece. Also, a nightmare. Blood Meridian is arguably the greatest American novel of the late 20th century, but it is also one of the most brutal, nihilistic, and stylistically challenging books ever written. It is not a book you enjoy ; it is a book you survive and are forever changed by. The Plot (Minimal Spoilers) The story follows "the kid," a teenage runaway from Tennessee, who falls in with a gang of historical scalp-hunters along the Texas-Mexico border in the 1850s. The gang is hired by corrupt governors and generals to slaughter Native Americans (and anyone else) for profit. At the center of the carnage is the novel’s true subject: Judge Holden , a massive, hairless, erudite, and utterly inhuman man who may be the devil, or war itself made flesh. What Works (Brilliantly) 1. The Prose McCarthy’s language is biblical, incantatory, and terrifyingly beautiful. He refuses quotation marks, minimal punctuation, and shifts between jaw-dropping, lyrical descriptions of the desert landscape and clinical, unflinching depictions of violence. “They rode on and the sun in the east flushed pale streaks of light and then a deeper run of color like blood seeping up in sudden reaches flaring planewise and where the earth ended and the sun at night and the west the evening redness in the west.” Every page has a sentence you’ll want to frame—right after a paragraph that will make you nauseous. Blood Meridian- Or The Evening Redness In The West
As critic Harold Bloom said: “Blood Meridian is the ultimate Western, both in the sense that it is the best ever written and that it ends the genre.” Read it if you dare, but know you will not forget the judge’s dance. Don’t expect character arcs or redemption
One of the greatest villains in all of literature. He is a 7-foot, albino, hairless polyglot, a naturalist, a dancer, a murderer of children, and a philosopher. His speeches on war, violence, and man’s true nature are chillingly logical: “War is the ultimate game because war is at last a forcing of the unity of existence. War is god.” 3. The Historical Backbone The novel is loosely based on the真实的 Memoirs of a Border Captain by Samuel Chamberlain. McCarthy did immense research into the real Glanton Gang. This isn’t fantasy violence; it’s a horrifying refraction of actual American history. What Might Turn You Off 1. The Violence (Extreme) This is not action-movie violence. It is graphic, repetitive, and often directed at defenseless people (including infants). McCarthy describes scalping, impalement, and massacre with the same neutral, beautiful language he uses for a sunrise. Many readers cannot finish the book for this reason. The ending (especially the infamous "jakes" scene) is





