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Suttree 
This big novel is quite interesting. I'd started this very early in 2016 or so. I was enchanted by the baroque and luxurious prose describing that grotesque spirit of the old Knoxville. Then i got a little bored. And put it down. Then came back to it. And was moved again. And remembered why I love Cormac McCarthy so much. And ended up loving the book again.[will make a better review than this, I promise]10:11 PM, 2/12/2017- in the middle of re-reading Blood Meridian. In that I almost forgot
I will never think of watermelons the same way again!, I mean "the moonlight melonmounter", come on!, by McCarthy's standards this was a laugh riot compared to his other works, but still retains the dark themes of misery, misfits and poverty. I didn't think anything would topple the awesome "Blood Meridian", well this most definitely did. An epic Tennessee masterpiece.

A goodreader's recommendation has come at the right moment.Arrived a bit late from amazon, and I have only just finished James Kelman. But I have read the first sentence, and here goes....It is marvellous. Somewhat as McCarthy, I'll refract and draw a few straight lines but first one way of seeing it whole. It's ethical, of course, and not moral, and the distinction between the two is immense in this book. An oddyssey of one man who is all souls in an underworld (literally most of the settings
'Suttree' goes directly into my own, personal daydream of the idealized 20th century canon. The heavily stylized prose hearkens back to the works of Joyce, Steinbeck, Algren, Faulkner, and Celine. Indeed, I have yet to encounter another book that so perfectly synthesizes these five unique voices of 20th century literature'Suttree', at heart, is a sort of urban pastoral, replete with the myriad voices of a depressed, post-war Knoxville. Cornelius Suttree's wanderings echo precisely the
To paraphrase Jerry Garcia: What a long strange trip this book has been. Most of it takes place on the waterfront of Knoxville, Tennessee, circa early 1950's. Suttree is a "river rat", living in a derelict houseboat and making his living as a fisherman, cavorting with down and out members of the Knoxville underworld. The difference between them and Suttree is that he was born into a privileged family and has chosen this life. We never find out why, and are only given a few hints of his previous
like faulkner, except good...
Cormac McCarthy
Paperback | Pages: 471 pages Rating: 4.18 | 16947 Users | 1348 Reviews

Identify Books Conducive To Suttree
| Original Title: | Suttree |
| ISBN: | 0679736328 (ISBN13: 9780679736325) |
| Edition Language: | English |
| Characters: | Cornelius Suttree, Gene Harrogate |
| Setting: | Knoxville, Tennessee,1951(United States) Tennessee(United States) |
| Literary Awards: | Lillian Smith Book Award (1980) |
Explanation To Books Suttree
This compelling novel has as its protagonist Cornelius Suttree, living alone and in exile in a disintegrating houseboat on the wrong side of the Tennessee River close by Knoxville. He stays at the edge of an outcast community inhabited by eccentrics, criminals and the poverty-stricken. Rising above the physical and human squalor around him, his detachment and wry humour enable him to survive dereliction and destitution with dignity.Mention Based On Books Suttree
| Title | : | Suttree |
| Author | : | Cormac McCarthy |
| Book Format | : | Paperback |
| Book Edition | : | Deluxe Edition |
| Pages | : | Pages: 471 pages |
| Published | : | May 1992 by Vintage International (first published May 1979) |
| Categories | : | Fiction. Literature. Gothic. Southern Gothic. Novels. Classics |
Rating Based On Books Suttree
Ratings: 4.18 From 16947 Users | 1348 ReviewsArticle Based On Books Suttree
'Suttree', Cormac McCarthy's 1979 Southern Gothic, semi-autobiographical novel was written over a twenty year span. Set in 1951 Knoxville, Cornelius Suttree, or 'Sut', has abandoned his wife and son and a life of privilege in favor of a life of squalor in a rundown houseboat on the Tennessee River.Considered by many to be McCarthy's masterpiece, it is an extraordinary study of a fragmented man and the ragtag medley of drunkards, lowlifes, squatters, hookers, and ne'er-do-wells whose livesThis big novel is quite interesting. I'd started this very early in 2016 or so. I was enchanted by the baroque and luxurious prose describing that grotesque spirit of the old Knoxville. Then i got a little bored. And put it down. Then came back to it. And was moved again. And remembered why I love Cormac McCarthy so much. And ended up loving the book again.[will make a better review than this, I promise]10:11 PM, 2/12/2017- in the middle of re-reading Blood Meridian. In that I almost forgot
I will never think of watermelons the same way again!, I mean "the moonlight melonmounter", come on!, by McCarthy's standards this was a laugh riot compared to his other works, but still retains the dark themes of misery, misfits and poverty. I didn't think anything would topple the awesome "Blood Meridian", well this most definitely did. An epic Tennessee masterpiece.

A goodreader's recommendation has come at the right moment.Arrived a bit late from amazon, and I have only just finished James Kelman. But I have read the first sentence, and here goes....It is marvellous. Somewhat as McCarthy, I'll refract and draw a few straight lines but first one way of seeing it whole. It's ethical, of course, and not moral, and the distinction between the two is immense in this book. An oddyssey of one man who is all souls in an underworld (literally most of the settings
'Suttree' goes directly into my own, personal daydream of the idealized 20th century canon. The heavily stylized prose hearkens back to the works of Joyce, Steinbeck, Algren, Faulkner, and Celine. Indeed, I have yet to encounter another book that so perfectly synthesizes these five unique voices of 20th century literature'Suttree', at heart, is a sort of urban pastoral, replete with the myriad voices of a depressed, post-war Knoxville. Cornelius Suttree's wanderings echo precisely the
To paraphrase Jerry Garcia: What a long strange trip this book has been. Most of it takes place on the waterfront of Knoxville, Tennessee, circa early 1950's. Suttree is a "river rat", living in a derelict houseboat and making his living as a fisherman, cavorting with down and out members of the Knoxville underworld. The difference between them and Suttree is that he was born into a privileged family and has chosen this life. We never find out why, and are only given a few hints of his previous
like faulkner, except good...
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