The Passenger by Cormac McCarthy
The Passenger by Cormac McCarthy

Literary fiction · 2022

The Passenger review

by Cormac McCarthy

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The verdict

The Passenger is the first of two late novels Cormac McCarthy published in 2022, companion to Stella Maris.

Best for curious readers in the genre. Reading time: 7h 45m.

The Passenger by Cormac McCarthy
The Passenger by Cormac McCarthy

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What it argues

The Passenger is the first of two late novels Cormac McCarthy published in 2022, companion to Stella Maris. Its protagonist is Bobby Western, a salvage diver working off the Louisiana coast in 1980, the son of a physicist who worked on the Manhattan Project and the brother of Alicia Western, a mathematical genius who died by suicide. Bobby is haunted by Alicia — by his love for her, by her death, by the guilt inherited from their father's work — and by a recurring hallucinatory figure called the Kid who plagues him with surreal, darkly comic monologues. A missing body from a sunken plane, and then men who come looking for Bobby, set the novel's loose thriller framework in motion before that framework dissolves into something else.

The book is less a novel than a meditation with narrative furniture. McCarthy is interested in whether consciousness can survive the knowledge of mass death, whether a man can live inside the moral legacy of the atomic bomb, and whether love — particularly the forbidden variety Bobby harbors for his sister — is compatible with anything like a normal life. These are not easy questions and McCarthy doesn't pretend to answer them; he renders them in his characteristic long declarative sentences and lets them compound.

What it gets right

  1. 1.

    The Manhattan Project runs through the novel not as historical background but as active inheritance — Bobby carries his father's moral contamination in his body, and it colors every decision.

  2. 2.

    Alicia's ghost is the novel's gravitational center: she is both the person Bobby lost and the representation of a kind of pure intelligence the world doesn't accommodate.

  3. 3.

    The Kid's hallucinatory monologues are McCarthy's most experimentally playful writing — darkly comic, surreal, and the closest the novel comes to direct speech about consciousness.

What it covers

Who wrote it

Cormac McCarthy (1933–2023) was an American novelist considered one of the foremost prose stylists in American literature. His major works include Blood Meridian, the Border Trilogy (All the Pretty Horses, The Crossing, Cities of the Plain), No Country for Old Men, and The Road, which won the Pulitzer Prize in 2007. He was known for his uncompromising subject matter, distinctive prose style without quotation marks or standard punctuation, and engagement with questions of violence, morality, and consciousness. The Passenger and its companion Stella Maris were his final novels, published when he was eighty-nine.

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