Robin's Reviews > All the Pretty Horses
All the Pretty Horses (The Border Trilogy, #1)
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Robin's review
bookshelves: national-book-award, 2018, american, literary-fiction, 1001-before-you-die
Oct 05, 2018
bookshelves: national-book-award, 2018, american, literary-fiction, 1001-before-you-die
On the surface, this book is a cowboy adventure. A gritty story in which childhood doesn't exist and two teenage boys, John Grady and Lacey Rawlins, are alone riding in a land foreign to them. They speak when they only truly have something worth saying. They sleep under the stars. Their only possessions are often the clothes on their back, a razor and a toothbrush. Oh, and their horses.
This life is sometimes idyllic, but more often, dangerous. It becomes complicated when they run into Blevins, a kid whose fate entwines with theirs, with disastrous consequences.
As in other books by this author, themes of fate and inevitability echo. Several lines have a prescient quality to happenings later on in the book. And, similar to No Country for Old Men, the wheels of the story are pushed down the hill by one single decision. It's pretty brutal (cauterizing a bullet wound using a heated gun barrel is just one of the cringe-inducing scenes), though truth be told, this is decidedly gentler than other McCarthy books.
So yes, wild west saga. But between the lines, the book couldn't be more romantic. Not Nora Roberts romantic, no, although there is a love story here too. But within this book pulses a heart that beats passionately for the past. This heart is broken for the loss of a time that no longer exists. The ticking clock has left John Grady in a country he doesn't recognise, and to which he no longer belongs.
Set in 1949, he is witnessing is the death of an era. People will watch movies about cowboys, instead of living like them. Elvis and television, office jobs and jello-molded salads - an artificially sanitised culture is around the bend. We don't glimpse the new world in the pages of this book, but we readers know what is ahead, and we know this guy on his horse will be the square peg, a ghostrider, a bewildered and bewildering sight.
This yearning nostalgia is reflected in unbelievably lyrical prose. McCarthy outdoes himself here in lush descriptions that convey a deep romance, while at the same point writing with zero sentimentality. It's a magical mixture of the bleak and the heartfelt.
This novel isn't perfect. The ending, just as in No Country, slows significantly from a galloping story to a series of rambling speeches. But, I just couldn't give it less than five stars. I guess I like romance more than I thought.
At the end of the day, there are few things John Grady can count on. One is his profound solitude. The other: those horses, those pretty horses - time cannot touch them.
This life is sometimes idyllic, but more often, dangerous. It becomes complicated when they run into Blevins, a kid whose fate entwines with theirs, with disastrous consequences.
As in other books by this author, themes of fate and inevitability echo. Several lines have a prescient quality to happenings later on in the book. And, similar to No Country for Old Men, the wheels of the story are pushed down the hill by one single decision. It's pretty brutal (cauterizing a bullet wound using a heated gun barrel is just one of the cringe-inducing scenes), though truth be told, this is decidedly gentler than other McCarthy books.
So yes, wild west saga. But between the lines, the book couldn't be more romantic. Not Nora Roberts romantic, no, although there is a love story here too. But within this book pulses a heart that beats passionately for the past. This heart is broken for the loss of a time that no longer exists. The ticking clock has left John Grady in a country he doesn't recognise, and to which he no longer belongs.
Set in 1949, he is witnessing is the death of an era. People will watch movies about cowboys, instead of living like them. Elvis and television, office jobs and jello-molded salads - an artificially sanitised culture is around the bend. We don't glimpse the new world in the pages of this book, but we readers know what is ahead, and we know this guy on his horse will be the square peg, a ghostrider, a bewildered and bewildering sight.
This yearning nostalgia is reflected in unbelievably lyrical prose. McCarthy outdoes himself here in lush descriptions that convey a deep romance, while at the same point writing with zero sentimentality. It's a magical mixture of the bleak and the heartfelt.
This novel isn't perfect. The ending, just as in No Country, slows significantly from a galloping story to a series of rambling speeches. But, I just couldn't give it less than five stars. I guess I like romance more than I thought.
At the end of the day, there are few things John Grady can count on. One is his profound solitude. The other: those horses, those pretty horses - time cannot touch them.

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Reading Progress
November 11, 2016
– Shelved
September 15, 2018
–
Started Reading
September 23, 2018
–
10.0%
September 30, 2018
–
20.0%
September 30, 2018
–
30.0%
"A good-lookin horse is like a good-lookin woman, he said. They're always more trouble than what they're worth."
September 30, 2018
–
50.0%
"Nesting cranes that stood singlefooted among the cane on the south shore had pulled their slender beaks from their wingpits to watch. Me quires? she said. Yes, he said. He said her name. God yes, he said."
September 30, 2018
–
50.0%
"Nesting cranes that stood singlefooted among the cane on the south shore had pulled their slender beaks from their wingpits to watch. Me quieres? she said. Yes, he said. He said her name. God yes, he said."
October 2, 2018
–
70.0%
October 5, 2018
–
Finished Reading
Comments Showing 1-50 of 63 (63 new)
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Padraig
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Oct 05, 2018 11:03AM

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That's impressive Padraig, that you remember the opening line. He has so many beautiful and memorable lines here, though. I did a bunch of underlining as I was reading.

Thanks, Katie. I really loved and can recommend No Country for Old Men - it was super brutal and violent but the story charged forward powerfully and the bad guy Anton Chigur is SO very bad, maybe the baddest.

Wonderful analysis, Robin.





Agreed! I had seen the film first also, but found the book equally riveting.

Wonderful analysis, Robin."
I've turned into a weird zookeeper of sorts, Fede. Wtf?

You nailed it, Wayne! Exactly. The storyline with the girl was lovely but secondary. It was always about the horses.




Joe, I can count on you to enrich the discussion with pertinent film gems. I haven't seen either of those movies but now I'm intrigued. The westerns that I have watched have been by far and large ones starring Clint Eastwood. Hubba hubba.


Thank you, Cheri! This was on my list for several years too. I think in general, I was intimidated by Cormack McCarthy, but after reading The Road and No Country for Old Men this year, I can safely say I've gotten over that fear. He's immensely readable and can sure tell a story! Pretty damn bleak outlook, though this book is less so.

Ah Candi! I wondered if we would be meeting for our Saturday morning coffee date today :D But you beat me to it. Wine is good too.
Thanks so much, and I look forward to reading your review of this one day. It's got a great story with a sweeping cinematic romanticism that's hard not to love.

I steer clear of Nora Roberts romance too, Laysee. This book is a different breed altogether. A thoroughbred, now that I come to think of it ;)
You're not a coward at all, my dear. Not every book is for every reader. I'm wired this way - I belong in these dark pages - but I don't recommend you to force yourself through something you know isn't your thing. You read so widely as it is! Thanks again for stopping by my review, especially one of a book that you likely won't read. I appreciate it.

A fab review, as ever!"
You know me, Kevin, I'm such a sap! :D
Thanks for stopping by - I feel like I need to go see what you've been reading lately. I haven't read a Kevin-review in a little while!

Thank you kindly, Laura! There's no getting away from the romantic and nostalgic depictions of cowboy life in this book. (And violent/brutal ones, too.) But along with that is a pretty compelling story. Maybe that tempts you a little?

So do I! It happens to be one of my reading goals for this year - fingers crossed I get to it. Thanks so much for your lovely comment, Markus.

Hi Susan - I'm confused, no need for you to apologise and I definitely wasn't correcting you. Just thanking you happily for stopping by my review and taking the time to make a kind comment. :-)

My middle child walked behind me as I was finishing up your review and she gasped at the photo of the horses. That's how things go around here.
Five stars, eh?

My middle child walked behind me as I was finishing up your review and she gasped at the photo of the horses. That's how things go around here.
Five stars, eh?"
I can't say I blame her. They are magnificent!
Yes, five stars. It was a tough call for me, because the ending wasn't as strong as the first three quarters of the book. I think Joe felt the same. I wavered between 4 and 5 many times. This would have been a solid 4.5 if ŷ allowed half stars. But at the end of the day, the horses won me over.

But, you know. . . you still haven't read the BEST book about cowboys yet. . .

But, you know. . . you still haven't read the BEST book about cowboys yet. . ."
You're talkin' Lonesome Dove, right?
I KNOW! < hangs head in shame >
It's one of my 2018 reading goals. I hope to get there!!



Hi Robert, I'm so glad my review prompted you to read this book!
I can't speak to how it compares to Blood Meridian - I haven't read that one yet. But I loved the other two McCarthy ones you mentioned and I believe this stands up with them. It's gentler than both of those, so if you're looking for another Anton Chigurh you might be slightly disappointed. But I think it's a great book. Hope you'll pop by and let me know how you liked it!

"This yearning nostalgia is reflected in unbelievably lyrical prose."
Yes, how true. I can read Spanish, so those extended Spanish-only parts enhanced the book for me, but I can only imagine the frustration of Cormac's editors (...."Why Cormac, why?? Can't you just translate those paragraphs?....")
Thanks for this review - I'm sorry I missed it earlier.

Count me among those who never heard of The Stonemason - thank you for mentioning it, John! I think my favourite McCarthy thus far (I have many more to read) is No Country for Old Men, although, surprisingly, I gave it 4 stars. The end fizzled for me, but the rest of it was stunning.
I really want to read Blood Meridian soon. #goals


That's so beautiful. Really. I love that you and your sister had that conversation.


Thanks, Jacob. Great point about the children. Hard to imagine in those times that kids could be shielded from reality for very long, though.

worth saying."
How much I like this concept !"
Yes - minimalist communication. Something very appealing about that idea.

Well thank you, Lesle - what a kind comment!
