CORMAC MCCARTHY’S "THE ROAD" Stretches Out Before You Once More!
Cormac McCarthy’s novel “The Road” was one of the author’s most personal and acclaimed books. The story of a nameless father and son trying to survive with their humanity intact in a post-apocalyptic wasteland, where Earth’s natural resources have been diminished and some survivors are left to raise others for meat, “The Road” is one of Cormac McCarthy’s bleakest and most prescient novels. Dedicated to his son, McCarthy’s novel received the Pulitzer Prize for Fiction and the James Tait Black Memorial Prize for Fiction and was nominated for the National Book Critics Circle Award, before being adapted into an acclaimed film directed by John Hillcoat. This fall, The Road has again been adapted as a startling and evocative graphic novel from internationally renowned cartoonist Manu Larcenet.
Manu Larcenet sent a letter to Cormac McCarthy asking for his permission to adapt The Road. He wrote:
“I loved The Road for the atmosphere it creates. Most likely because I enjoy drawing the snow, the chilling winds, the dark clouds, the sizzling rain, tangles and snags, rust, and the damp and the humidity. I draw violence and kindness, wild animals, dirty skin, pits, and stagnant water. I enjoy the contrast between the characters and their environment, and as conceited as it may sound, I feel like I’m up to the task.
If I am so bold as to ask you to draw your Road, it is not to rewrite anything, or change the feel of the story. I have no other ambitions but to draw your words. The magical part of being an illustrator is to find a silent line to draw with every word. These lines could support yours without distorting them. At least, that’s the goal if this project should come to fruition.
I’m coming off years of writing that wore me down, and I want nothing more than to draw! For almost six months now, I’ve been reading your book again and again, almost living in it. I’m starting to see how I could tackle the challenge of following the guidelines you set without feeling trapped by them. On top of that, I’ve been racking my brain to avoid any reference to the movie adaptation.
I usually write my own comics, one of which (Blast) shares common themes with your book. But I didn’t write The Road; I really wish I had! I sincerely thank you for allowing me to put my pencil down where your pen went.”
The request was personally approved by McCarthy, and the adaptation would be one of the last books he worked on in his career. The adaptation took several years and the result is an astoundingly beautiful adaptation of a haunting tale of human perseverance and familial love. The graphic novel adaptation was published in France this spring and sold over 60,000 copies in the first three weeks.
Have read the original novel and seen the film adaptation, and being moved by both in different ways. I am looking forward to seeing if Manu is up to the task of creating an further adaptation both equal and different to those that came before.
THE ROAD Graphic Novel Adaptation by Manu Larcenet is available now online and in many local comic and book stores.
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