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From the bestselling author of The Passenger and the Pulitzer Prize–winning novel The Road , here is the story of Cornelius Suttree, who has forsaken a life of privilege with his prominent family to live in a dilapidated houseboat on the Tennessee River near Knoxville. Remaining on the margins of the outcast community there—a brilliantly imagined collection of eccentrics, criminals, and squatters—he rises above the physical and human squalor with detachment, humor, and dignity. Review: This Is An American Classic For A Reason - This novel is linguistically dense, wrapped in metaphor and symbols, and tells the story of Suttree, a man who's abandoned his family, and bums around on his boat, struggles with poverty, meets a colorful cast of characters dealing with the same challenges, and goes about day to day life as chaos ensues. It's a fun, entertaining read that has all the hallmarks of Cormac McCarthy, while being his most wordy, poetic, and lyrical novel. A meditation on loneliness and the American dream. Review: One man’s years dwelling in the Lower Depths - Having previously read six of Cormac McCarthy’s other novels, I have come to expect certain characteristics of his prose and subject matter. I have never seen a quotation mark or a comma in one of these novels. I have seen plenty of ‘ands’ and periodic elevated or grandiose language used when describing depraved, violent, or ugly, disgusting, visceral matters involving bodily fluids i.e., blood, vomit, feces, various infections. I know that McCarthy never cuts his readers any slack or gives them any more explanation than absolutely necessary, although in each of the novels there is a narrative plot thread, something linear or chronological on which to hang the linguistic structure. Even this is often missing in his 1979 novel, ‘Suttree’, and that makes writing a review more difficult. ‘Suttree’ is the last of the early period of McCarthy’s novels with a setting in the American South, namely Knoxville, and there are presumably autobiographical parallels with McCarthy’s own experiences living in that region in his earlier years. The premise is simple: Cornelius Suttree, a young man who came from an affluent family, deserted his wife and young son and the material comforts of his previous life to live among the lower classes in the Knoxville area—the small-time criminals, prostitutes, the homeless, the hand-to-mouth denizens of the lower depths of society. The novel occurs during the first half of the 1950’s. Suttree, often referred to as Sut, Bud or Buddy, or Youngblood, lives in a houseboat docked below one of the bridges of the Tennessee River. He goes out in his skiff to catch fish that he will sell to local markets, hopefully for enough to stay stocked in beans and coffee. The explanation for why Suttree would leave his former life to live life on the margins of survival is never made clear. He does express grief upon learning of his young son’s death and after the former in-laws drive him away from the funeral he returns later to start burying his son’s grave with a heartbreaking frenzy. That is the most demonstrative he ever gets throughout the novel. We get the impression that he is educated, more intelligent, more articulate than most of the bottom-dwellers with whom he associates. Suttree spends much of his time drinking and being in the wrong place at the wrong time, a lifestyle risk of living among thieves and homeless people. This explains why he ends up serving several months in a workhouse for being an accessory to a failed robbery attempt—he was driving the getaway car. While in the workhouse he meets the most comic character in the novel, Gene Harrogate, a skinny simpleton who seems predestined to follow his most idiotic impulses to predictably disastrous ends. When asked what brought him to the workhouse, Gene explains that he was having sex with watermelons in a farmer’s patch and got caught after he had already gratified himself with the entire crop. ‘They tried to get me for beast, beast…Bestiality? Yeah, but my lawyer told em a watermelon wasnt no beast. He was a smart son of a bitch. Oh boy, said Suttree.’ Suttree feels some sense of responsibility for Harrogate, as if he has inherited some idiot son as a surrogate for the son he lost. This leads him later to dig under wreckage beneath a bank when Gene tried to rob a bank with dynamite and exploded a water main by mistake, burying him in sewage. Suttree finds him and resuscitates him. Suttree is for various reasons unable to sustain any kind of romantic relationship. He has a clandestine affair with the teenage daughter of a man with whom he has been collecting mussels and harvesting pearls to sell, unsuccessfully. The affair ends, not with any discovery by the father but when the girl is buried in a landslide. Later, he has a relationship with a prostitute who brings him money reportedly from generous payments from satisfied customers but then, as everything seems to be going well, she has a complete mental breakdown. The theme of death and burial flows through the novel, culminating in Suttree’s own accounting of what he did with his life, what meaning he found in his life. ‘Tilting back in his chair he framed questions for the quaking ovoid of lamplight on the ceiling to pose to him: Supposing there be any soul to listen and you died tonight? They’d listen to my death. No final word? Last words are only words. You can tell me, paradigm of your own sinister genesis construed by a flame in a glass bell. I’d say I was not unhappy. You have nothing. It may be the last shall be first. Do you believe that? No. What do you believe? I believe that the last and the first suffer equally. Pari passu. Equally? It is not alone in the dark of death that all souls are one soul. Of what would you repent? Nothing. Nothing? One thing. I spoke with bitterness about my life and I said that I would take my own part against the slander of oblivion and against the monstrous facelessness of it and that I would stand a stone in the very void where all would read my name. Of that vanity I recant all.’ ‘Suttree’ is also perhaps McCarthy’s most profound novel. Like all of McCarthy’s other novels that I’ve read it deals with death as it occurs individually as well as conceptually, but the death in ‘Suttree’ is not so specifically the result of violence committed from the masculine urge to hunt and kill as became his specialty in his next few novels. ‘Suttree’ is McCarthy’s longest novel and it also has the most saturated prose. There are passages of great beauty that evoke Shakespeare. It is difficult to write a coherent review of a novel that can not be easily summarized or assessed. I think that Suttree, like Thoreau, has sought to live life deliberately, to know that he has perceived the sensory substance of living, which always carries death within it, by living among others who scrape by for daily existence and are one step away from oblivion. This novel is dense enough to bear rereading. Perhaps within a couple of years I will re-read it. I’m certain that I’ll discover aspects I missed this time around and when I do, I’ll hopefully be able to write a more enlightened review.



| Best Sellers Rank | #9,395 in Books ( See Top 100 in Books ) #57 in Westerns (Books) #90 in Contemporary Literature & Fiction #536 in Literary Fiction (Books) |
| Customer Reviews | 4.4 out of 5 stars 2,227 Reviews |
C**R
This Is An American Classic For A Reason
This novel is linguistically dense, wrapped in metaphor and symbols, and tells the story of Suttree, a man who's abandoned his family, and bums around on his boat, struggles with poverty, meets a colorful cast of characters dealing with the same challenges, and goes about day to day life as chaos ensues. It's a fun, entertaining read that has all the hallmarks of Cormac McCarthy, while being his most wordy, poetic, and lyrical novel. A meditation on loneliness and the American dream.
B**B
One man’s years dwelling in the Lower Depths
Having previously read six of Cormac McCarthy’s other novels, I have come to expect certain characteristics of his prose and subject matter. I have never seen a quotation mark or a comma in one of these novels. I have seen plenty of ‘ands’ and periodic elevated or grandiose language used when describing depraved, violent, or ugly, disgusting, visceral matters involving bodily fluids i.e., blood, vomit, feces, various infections. I know that McCarthy never cuts his readers any slack or gives them any more explanation than absolutely necessary, although in each of the novels there is a narrative plot thread, something linear or chronological on which to hang the linguistic structure. Even this is often missing in his 1979 novel, ‘Suttree’, and that makes writing a review more difficult. ‘Suttree’ is the last of the early period of McCarthy’s novels with a setting in the American South, namely Knoxville, and there are presumably autobiographical parallels with McCarthy’s own experiences living in that region in his earlier years. The premise is simple: Cornelius Suttree, a young man who came from an affluent family, deserted his wife and young son and the material comforts of his previous life to live among the lower classes in the Knoxville area—the small-time criminals, prostitutes, the homeless, the hand-to-mouth denizens of the lower depths of society. The novel occurs during the first half of the 1950’s. Suttree, often referred to as Sut, Bud or Buddy, or Youngblood, lives in a houseboat docked below one of the bridges of the Tennessee River. He goes out in his skiff to catch fish that he will sell to local markets, hopefully for enough to stay stocked in beans and coffee. The explanation for why Suttree would leave his former life to live life on the margins of survival is never made clear. He does express grief upon learning of his young son’s death and after the former in-laws drive him away from the funeral he returns later to start burying his son’s grave with a heartbreaking frenzy. That is the most demonstrative he ever gets throughout the novel. We get the impression that he is educated, more intelligent, more articulate than most of the bottom-dwellers with whom he associates. Suttree spends much of his time drinking and being in the wrong place at the wrong time, a lifestyle risk of living among thieves and homeless people. This explains why he ends up serving several months in a workhouse for being an accessory to a failed robbery attempt—he was driving the getaway car. While in the workhouse he meets the most comic character in the novel, Gene Harrogate, a skinny simpleton who seems predestined to follow his most idiotic impulses to predictably disastrous ends. When asked what brought him to the workhouse, Gene explains that he was having sex with watermelons in a farmer’s patch and got caught after he had already gratified himself with the entire crop. ‘They tried to get me for beast, beast…Bestiality? Yeah, but my lawyer told em a watermelon wasnt no beast. He was a smart son of a bitch. Oh boy, said Suttree.’ Suttree feels some sense of responsibility for Harrogate, as if he has inherited some idiot son as a surrogate for the son he lost. This leads him later to dig under wreckage beneath a bank when Gene tried to rob a bank with dynamite and exploded a water main by mistake, burying him in sewage. Suttree finds him and resuscitates him. Suttree is for various reasons unable to sustain any kind of romantic relationship. He has a clandestine affair with the teenage daughter of a man with whom he has been collecting mussels and harvesting pearls to sell, unsuccessfully. The affair ends, not with any discovery by the father but when the girl is buried in a landslide. Later, he has a relationship with a prostitute who brings him money reportedly from generous payments from satisfied customers but then, as everything seems to be going well, she has a complete mental breakdown. The theme of death and burial flows through the novel, culminating in Suttree’s own accounting of what he did with his life, what meaning he found in his life. ‘Tilting back in his chair he framed questions for the quaking ovoid of lamplight on the ceiling to pose to him: Supposing there be any soul to listen and you died tonight? They’d listen to my death. No final word? Last words are only words. You can tell me, paradigm of your own sinister genesis construed by a flame in a glass bell. I’d say I was not unhappy. You have nothing. It may be the last shall be first. Do you believe that? No. What do you believe? I believe that the last and the first suffer equally. Pari passu. Equally? It is not alone in the dark of death that all souls are one soul. Of what would you repent? Nothing. Nothing? One thing. I spoke with bitterness about my life and I said that I would take my own part against the slander of oblivion and against the monstrous facelessness of it and that I would stand a stone in the very void where all would read my name. Of that vanity I recant all.’ ‘Suttree’ is also perhaps McCarthy’s most profound novel. Like all of McCarthy’s other novels that I’ve read it deals with death as it occurs individually as well as conceptually, but the death in ‘Suttree’ is not so specifically the result of violence committed from the masculine urge to hunt and kill as became his specialty in his next few novels. ‘Suttree’ is McCarthy’s longest novel and it also has the most saturated prose. There are passages of great beauty that evoke Shakespeare. It is difficult to write a coherent review of a novel that can not be easily summarized or assessed. I think that Suttree, like Thoreau, has sought to live life deliberately, to know that he has perceived the sensory substance of living, which always carries death within it, by living among others who scrape by for daily existence and are one step away from oblivion. This novel is dense enough to bear rereading. Perhaps within a couple of years I will re-read it. I’m certain that I’ll discover aspects I missed this time around and when I do, I’ll hopefully be able to write a more enlightened review.
J**S
Cosmological Flares
I prefer not to recount the story line but to rather give a few thoughts about the overarching nature of the story that emerges over the course of the novel. C.M.'s Suttree simply gets at the challenges and strains, as well as the pleasures and beauties, of the human condition. The "freakish imaginative flair" of his story noted by the Times Literary Supplement reviewer, quoted on Amazon, is most evident and striking in Suttree's cosmological insights or experiences unleashed by some of his dire moments. These cosmological -- or, to use C.M's word, "galactic" -- flairs impose Suttree's flashes and fevers on the reader in such a way that the reader is felt to virtually share those experiences. This aspect of the novel emerges gradually, but when they appear they are immediate and fully impressed on the reader with C.M's poetic descriptions and metaphors. Suttree contains rather graphic scenes described in some places in jaw-dropping, disturbing detail: e.g. a borderline gang-rape scene, a natural disaster with violent effects on the human body, and a murder by gunshot to the face. The literary effect C.M. achieved might be the same as seeing these things in person: namely, the effect of staring or continuing to look back at the shocking image, or, in the course of the story, reading that detail over several times in attempt to comprehend it as if you were there witnessing the shocking event. These sorts of detailed scenes may not at all be for the faint of heart (I've not yet read Blood Meridian and so wonder what I'm in for there.) Finally, the minimalist nature of C.M.'s writing style is marvelous. If you just have to have quotation marks about the words of the actors, you will get none in this book. And I don't believe you will find any punctuation other than periods, a few commas, and fewer question marks -- nothing else. However, if you are following the story and its characters' conversations and can glean and imagine the emotions, body behaviors, tones of voices, etc. provided by context or the descriptions, the story simply springs to life. No quotation and exclamation marks, in my experience of the novel, leaves it up to the reader to furnish that aspect of the story for him or herself. I think this is a brilliant literary effect. My first C.M. read was The Road some years ago, which impressed me. After Suttree, I'll most certainly be reading more of C.M.
K**E
this is a great novel. It takes us into worlds that seem ...
Although at times the narrative is overwritten, with more figures per sentence than anything since Thomas Wolf, this is a great novel. It takes us into worlds that seem extravagantly imagined and then convinces us that they are real. The characterization is rich. Suttree, the main character, is a strange concatenation of cynic and innocent, menial and intellectual, good friend and irresponsible drunk. The book takes a perspective on the humblest, the oddest, the most unconventional that is warmly accepting and more so than most liberals, back in 1979, could even envision. The poor, Blacks,homosexuals,and the barely sane are judged totally on their intrinsic merits. The most wretched of the earth are portrayed with a real, if not humorless, tenderness hard to find in a writer so unsentimental as McCarthy. What it is to be cold, what it is to be hungry are so vivid that I find myself appreciating food and fireside more than I had before reading this.I think of the shivering "unaccommodated man" in Lear and the convict, Abel Magwitch, so cold and feverish that his teeth rattle against the neck of the bottle as he tries to drink- Shakespeare could show us this and Dickens too, but those two afflictions, hunger and cold, common, I'm afraid, to most of the people alive and most who have ever lived, are rarely shown as bitingly as McCarthy shows them. I think McCarthy is our greatest living writer, and I base that judgement on his later books such as The Border Trilogy, No Country for Old Men, and The Road. Nevertheless, his earlier works are far more worth reading than almost any contemporary novels I can think of.
S**S
My favorite
I've read close to everything Cormac McCarthy has ever written and I do believe he is the world's greatest living author. Suttree is his masterpiece. It was his third book I'd read of his after Blood Meridian and Child of God. I can't explain how beautiful this book is. There are moments I've remembered more clearly than from any other book I've ever read. The descriptions are awe inspiring--McCarthy is a master of subtlety. It's amazing how lifelike his characters become with only sparse description of their physicality or personal history. He's really a master story teller. This book is EPIC. Don't expect to finish it in three days or even a week. It's not meant to be read in such a manner. It's meant to be a true journey from start to finish, and though the book is long, it never seems to falter for a second. A more enjoyable and heartfelt read than maybe anything else I've read. On par with Thomas Wofle's LOOK HOMEWARD, ANGEL. If you're searching for an easy introduction to Cormac McCarthy's work I'd recommend BLOOD MERIDIAN or CHILD of GOD. CHILD of GOD is an especially solid intro to his work. SUTTREE is definitely a more intense wrangle. His least violent work, and also his most emotional and humorous. FYI, make it past the first FORTY pages and you're golden.There's some heavy word play and sprawling sentences that might turn off the reader. Keep with it--it smoothes out. It's well worth the read. There's nothing else like it. Readers of STEINBECK, FAULKNER, THOMAS WOLFE, and MELVILLE will love this work. Maybe even readers of JOYCE as well.
R**H
Masterful writing wasted on an unworthy subject
Suttree is a trajedy of sorts. Lots of bad things befall Cornelius Suttree the main character, but the main trajedy is that Suttree chooses to basically be a bum throughout the book, hardly lifting a finger to alter his downward path. He is presented as somehow being above it all, when in truth he is down in it just as much as the other low figures in the book. Suttree has a great quality of being open and caring to those around him no matter how low their station is. But the detachment [noted on the book jacket] that Suttree displays makes the depth of that feeling he has towards others kind of suspect. McCarthy does an incredible job of showing the rich humanity of the invisible poor in the book. The writing in general seemed like the author had something to prove, esp. regarding vocab, which I didn't notice as much in other books he has written. At times it was distracting and annoying instead of impressive. Overall, this book of McCarthy's can't hold a candle to others I have read of his. I guess it was worth the read, but the deep, overarching themes of his other works seemed absent here.
F**9
Episodic Southern Oddssey, the sum being bigger than its parts
“Dear friend now in the dusty clockless hours of the town when the streets lie black and steaming in the wake of the watertrucks and now when the drunk and the homeless have washed up in the lee of walls in alleys or abandoned lots and cats go forth highshouldered and lean in the grim perimeters about, now in these sootblacked brick or cobbled corridors where lightwire shadows make a gothic harp of cellar doors no soul shall walk save you.” Cormac McCarthy’s Suttree is a book that is hard to pin down and figure because it is so much, and really hard to legitimately describe in few words. And Suttree has McCarthy’s identifiable signature and style stamped all over it, which may put some readers off. Cornelius Suttree, the book’s central figure, has given up a life from his immediate family and lives as a fisherman in the slums of Knoxville. We are never really given much in the hows and whys of this separation, but there are points where we can infer and make our own speculations. The book is in one way a journey, both metaphorical and literal, a rambling series of episodes through Cornelius Suttree’s point of view. Suttree’s peers and allies are hopeless, derelict, and lonely, but there is a common bond and (dare I say) comradery amongst their group that contrasts sharply with the feeling of alienation. And, while a dreary tone pervades most of the book and exhibits much of the city’s slums and underbelly, there are points where the story and plot turns darkly comical. In a larger sense, the book is a meditation on death, destruction, and the alienation of the individual amid the human experience. McCarthy’s book, as others have attested to, is quite dense, ponderous and verbose; however, it is equally dark, profane, bizarre, and disturbing. Along the way we meet miscreants, derelicts, criminals, grotesques, and degenerates of various types. Yet, somehow, wading through all this, McCarthy’s book does have some humor and does offer hope and redemption. I felt that some of more interesting characters from the novel were Gene Harrogate (“country mouse”), Ab Jones (owner of the tavern), and Reese (another fisherman), all of whom Suttree develops friendships with. Harrogate, whom Suttree befriends in jail, is dumb as a box of rocks, and gets into trouble of all kinds through his stupid plans and decisions, but he simply is a fresh breath of air from the bleakness, a well-timed comic relief. Many of the other characters and individuals are reminiscent of a Flannery O’Connor book in their grotesqueness. In some ways, McCarthy’s Suttree is like the drunk and vulgar cousin of Steinbeck’s Cannery Row. There aren’t many books that you could call sophisticated, poetic, bizarre, dream-like, profane, literary, trashy, symbolic, philosophical, humorous, and reflective all in the same breath, but somehow Suttree manages to be all that, and then some. It really is a book all its own. .
D**E
Harsh and beautiful
I am a passionate reader who spends a lot of time in search of the rare gem of books, the needle in the haystack. I have found the needle. Shame on me, this is the first book I have read by Cormac McCarthy. I am an avid reader, but not highly trained on big words. I spent a lot of time looking up words, as I want to know not just what is being is said but what is meant, and there may be some challenging language for some. It is well worth the study as this is among the finest writing I have ever had the privilege to read. This book kept me immersed and haunted. Suttree is not a book to skim through but to spend time with. I sometimes spend a lot of time with a book and then sit and mull over why it reaches me in such a deep, moving way. I always find it comes down to the grit of life, the realness of being human that makes life and people so beautiful, funny, and terrible. The colors of the characters and their interactions balance out the bleakness of their ugly, filthy surroundings. I was made to feel compassion for the vilest of characters, and humor in the ugliest of situations. The beauty that I found had to be unburied from beneath the muck that suffuses every character and circumstance- and that is what I find in life- little gems here and there to be picked from the ashes of sickness and sorrow that surround us on paths that we at times chose, and at times have thrust upon us by the fickleness of fate.
R**S
Contact at his best
I have read many of Cormac Mc Carthys' books and rate it as on of his finest. His ability to transport your thoughts and senses to another world never cease to amaze me. It made me laugh and it made me sad. The main character Suttree is highly believable and his fragile life makes me feel how lucky I am in my own. A must read for those who love descriptive writing at its best.
S**D
Très bon livre
Parfait 👌
D**D
Cormac’s finest work 😀
I really enjoyed this portrait of Suttree, it has insight, compassion and considerable poignance - for me, the author’s finest work
A**A
Desolación
Una de las grandes obras de Cormac McCarty. Probablemente a la altura de "Meridiano de sangre" y muy por encima de obras más conocidas del mismo autor como "No es país para viejos" o "La carretera".
R**R
Magnificent novel.
This is Literature! Cormac McCarthy was a wonderful writer. This book in my opinion is his masterpiece. Very poetic with narrative that made me pause and reread his words. The characters come alive and they reader enters their world easily. A reminder of Hemingway, Dylan Thomas, Steinbeck and Thomas Hardy. Great writing that will never come again. A must read, a keeper and a Classic. Get one today. Makes a good gift but only for the serious reader.
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