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“While so many other dystopic novels focus on the "path to destruction," so to speak, McCarthy's plops his reader into a fully-formed post-apocalyptic world where human attachments matter much more than human failure. McCarthy creates a world of casualty where human life scrapes by while all other life--trees, animals, even grass--is gone.
It is a fantastic read, and unlike other dystopic novels full of overt caution, foreboding and "what ifs" about world-wide plague or nuclear war, this novel leads the reader directly to the bitter end: away from scenes of human violence. They are in the background, already in the past (but never forgotten) to a time even bleaker and even more violent when the very last human scavengers try to take care of themselves and (in the case of this novel) try to take care of those they love.”