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The Passenger Hardcover – Deckle Edge, October 25, 2022


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NEW YORK TIMES BEST SELLER • The first of a two-volume masterpiece, The Passenger series, from the Pulitzer Prize–winning author of The Road • The story of a salvage diver, haunted by loss, afraid of the watery deep, pursued for a conspiracy beyond his understanding, and longing for a death he cannot reconcile with God.

A NEW YORK TIMES BEST BOOK OF THE YEAR

"Blends the rowdy humor of some of McCarthy’s early novels with the parched tone of his more apocalyptic later work."
The New York Times

Stella Maris, the second volume in The Passenger series, is available now.

1980, PASS CHRISTIAN, MISSISSIPPI: It is three in the morning when Bobby Western zips the jacket of his wet suit and plunges from the Coast Guard tender into darkness. His dive light illuminates the sunken jet, nine bodies still buckled in their seats, hair floating, eyes devoid of speculation. Missing from the crash site are the pilot’s flight bag, the plane’s black box, and the tenth passenger. But how? A collateral witness to machinations that can only bring him harm, Western is shadowed in body and spirit—by men with badges; by the ghost of his father, inventor of the bomb that melted glass and flesh in Hiroshima; and by his sister, the love and ruin of his soul.
 
Traversing the American South, from the garrulous barrooms of New Orleans to an abandoned oil rig off the Florida coast,
The Passenger is a breathtaking novel of morality and science, the legacy of sin, and the madness that is human consciousness.
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From the Publisher

a literary event

grief is the stuff of life

if there is no higher power than i'm it

any number of these books were penned in lieu of burning down the world

Editorial Reviews

Review

NEW YORK TIMES BEST SELLER • NEW YORK TIMES NOTABLE BOOK OF THE YEAR

A BEST BOOK OF THE YEAR: NEW YORK TIMES • GOODREADS • KIRKUS

CARNEGIE MEDAL FOR EXCELLENCE NOMINEE

“A total banger…[
The Passenger] blends the rowdy humor of some of McCarthy’s early novels with the parched tone of his more apocalyptic later work. It’s the first novel I’ve read in years that I feel I need to read three more times to fully understand, and that I want to read three more times simply to savor. It’s so packed with funny, strange, haunted sentences that other writers will be stealing lines from it for epigraphs, as if it were Ecclesiastes, for the next 150 years….The whole thing reads like a cosmic, bleakly funny John D. MacDonald thriller…The Passenger is a great New Orleans novel. It’s a great food novel…For anyone who cares, it’s also a great Knoxville novel — Knoxville being where McCarthy spent most of his childhood. It’s filled with references to his earlier work...A sprawling book of ideas."
–Dwight Garner, The New York Times

“A brilliant book… A stunning accomplishment…McCarthy turns his substantial writerly gifts upon two distinct forces: the mechanical and the theoretical. He attends to the exquisite detail of Bobby’s physical world—the sounds and feel of an oil rig in a storm, the touch and clunk of a cigarette machine in a bar, the step-by-step process of removing a bathroom cabinet or digging up and carting off buried treasure…It’s Cormac McCarthy writing as only Cormac McCarthy can.”
–Carolyn Kellogg, Los Angeles Times

“McCarthy has assembled all the chilling ingredients of a locked-room mystery. But he leaps outside the boundaries of that antique form, just as he reworked the apocalypse in
The Road… Western knows he’s suspected of something, but he’s not told what. The two men who repeatedly question him never drop their formal politeness—never flash a bolt gun like Anton Chigurh in No Country for Old Men—but Western knows that his life is in danger and that he must run… The style—a mingling of profound contemplation and rapid-fire dialogue, always without quotation marks and often without attribution—is pure McCarthy.”
—Ron Charles, The Washington Post

“With the publication of
The Passenger and its companion novel Stella Maris, McCarthy seems to be done mining the myth of America. Instead, he ponders what it means to exist, and what our history tells us about our future… He digs into the big ideas of the universe, like human existence and what it means, as well as what our history and memory mean. He’s searching for something different… Where other writers venture into the mind and soul, McCarthy has leapt past that to ask what a soul is—and if it even exists…. McCarthy is no longer searching in the dirt trail across the West and saying, ‘This is it. This is our human nature.’ In The Passenger and Stella Maris, he’s trying to see the God that made the man who wrote those words.”
—Kevin Koczwara, Esquire

“After sixteen years of characteristic seclusion, McCarthy returns with a one-two punch...
The Passenger is an elegiac meditation on guilt, grief, and spirituality. Packed with textbook McCarthy hallmarks, like transgressive behaviors and cascades of ecstatic language, it’s a welcome return from a legend who’s been gone too long.”
—Adrienne Westenfeld, Esquire

“At 89, [McCarthy is] still riffing, like a jazz virtuoso, on the American Nightmare, Faulkner’s mythmaking, and the cadences of Joyce. McCarthy’s flame burns bright and clear in two new works…
The Passenger, wondrous in its architecture, and a companion piece, Stella Maris, a minimalist, edgy novella…McCarthy toggles between books and across decades, sketching the contours of a love that dare not say its name. McCarthy’s art is transcendent even as it takes no prisoners, an achievement akin only to the oeuvres of his greatest peers, Toni Morrison and Philip Roth. He will endure.”
Oprah Daily

“Sometimes I think the reason literary criticism got obsessed with evaluating prose as ‘sentences’ over the past few decades is simply that McCarthy’s are so good. They rattle out at you like little bullets, mean and punchy and precise… Taken together, [
The Passenger and Stella Maris] offer an intellectual experience that’s not quite like anything else out there, laced with the eerie beauty that only Cormac McCarthy can offer.”
—Constance Grady, Vox

His first novels since his 2006 Pulitzer Prize winner The Road…are as bold and intellectually keen as anything the author’s ever written…Faulknerian.”
—Barbara VanDenburgh, USA Today

“An imposing achievement and a testament to nearly nine decades of inquiry by a brilliant mind…The Passenger is a powerful and thought-provoking distillation of many of the genres and ideas that have obsessed McCarthy throughout his career. There are lyrical evocations of nature reminiscent of The Border Trilogy, elements of sinister thriller straight from
Νo Country for Old Men, moments of death-haunted solitude that recall The Road, and a comic cataloging of deviants and misfits that revives the riverside anthropology of Suttree.  The book’s kaleidoscopic compression of sensibilities and subjects constitutes a new aesthetic in its own right.”
—Nick Romeo, Daily Beast

“Like [Bob] Dylan, McCarthy fashions the country as a cast-iron, biblical land where grand themes play out in vast landscapes around lonely, small people. You can practically hear the rusty gate swaying in the wind, everything made of leather, mud, or simmering flesh. Most of us imagine life as a high-wire act with oneself as the acrobat, but McCarthy acknowledges it as a bridge, an ordinary path of extraordinary consequence with a beginning, an end, and an edge most men don’t ever tempt…The language in
The Passenger and Stella Maris is compelling and soulful, even when the voice sounds sharp. Amid…talk of mathematics and wickedness and hideous ruination, there is poetry and the rhythm of song. Sheddan’s lines alone are worth the price of admission, such as when he says humans are ‘ten percent biology and ninety percent nightrumor,’ and that ‘every remedy for loneliness only postpones it.’”
—Nathan King, Air Mail
 
The Passenger and Stella Maris tackle dazzlingly fresh ground…McCarthy’s daring has not dimmed since The Road, and The Passenger and Stella Maris pull no punches as they explore the craggiest regions of human consciousness through two of McCarthy’s most vividly drawn characters… McCarthy’s writing retains the tangible gristle of a field guide, full of the organic solidity and exacting diction that have helped solidify his reputation… Read together, The Passenger and Stella Maris are a fascinating diptych, bringing light and depth to each other. The mysteries and coincidences are legion, and mirrored moments are plentiful …. McCarthy’s writing pursues a sublime and majestic undercurrent weaving through the dark waves of chaos…. The results are staggering.”
—Seth L. Riley, The Millions

“Critics have detected the influence on [McCarthy] of Faulkner and Hemingway, but this is to understate his achievement. His new novel,
The Passenger, shows that McCarthy belongs in the company of Melville and Dostoevsky, writers the world will never cease to need…Many of the book’s scenes have a numinous, enigmatic quality that lingers in the mind…The Passenger is a study in living without answers.”
—John Gray, New Statesman

“A sprawling, surreal affair, a book as strange as any he’s ever written, and reminiscent of the melancholy drift and God-haunted monologues of McCarthy’s earliest novels….Almost everything about the novel’s first hundred pages generates expectations for something tough, lean and violent…And then—beautifully, mysteriously, and somewhat bafflingly—we get another book entirely … McCarthy [is]…a writer of both wonderfully taut and often very funny dialogue, and this is a book full of talk, bouncing from jokey drunk chat to near-baffling stretches of monologic erudition … He is a prose stylist without peer … On almost every page some Faulknerian dazzle finds you…It’s thrilling to return to writing as unashamedly biblical and rhetorical as this.” 
–Adam Rivett, The Sydney Morning Herald

“[
The Passenger] is among McCarthy’s most quietly reflective novels, recalling the moments of serenity amid scenes of devastation that made The Road so haunting…The ebb and flow of spare economy and lyrical intoxication undoubtedly lends the most rhapsodic passages a poignancy unusual even by McCarthy’s standards….A moving and characteristically disconcerting addition to the oeuvre of one of America’s greatest writers.”
—Doug Battersby, Irish Times

“A…beautifully rendered meditation on humanity’s relationship to nature… McCarthy, perhaps the most lyrical poet of slaughter since Homer, is at his most biblical and elegiac describing the horrors of Hiroshima and Nagasaki…
The Passenger and Stella Maris together form a profound addition to the legacy of a true literary savant.”
—Ed Tarkington, Chapter 16
 
“[McCarthy] rockets readers into the black hole at the hub of his galactic imagination, an event horizon so rich and dense we can only marvel as we fall through its warped fabric….Like Moses, McCarthy seeks a land of milk and honey beyond the rim of the universe but spies only oblivion (and perhaps the ghostly glow of math)… Despite the darkness ahead,
The Passenger and Stella Maris crown a magnificent career that will guide us forward, for as long as the lights stay on.”
—Hamilton Cain, Star Tribune

“[A] dizzyingly metaphysical treatise on the human condition. Although McCarthy initially clothes
The Passenger in the trappings of Hitchcockian espionage, it only takes so many conversations between Western and his lively cadre of barfly philosopher chums to realize that it’s in these digressions where McCarthy’s true fascination lies...The full payoff is unquestionably something remarkable. Eschewing body counts for philosophical debate, the legacy of McCarthy’s new offerings is…both magnificent and cruelly impossible to define.” 
—Zack Ruskin, SF Chronicle

“[McCarthy] reigns as a titan of American lit--an undisputed heir to Melville and Faulkner, the subject of infinite grad-school theses, and a hard-nosed dispenser of what Saul Bellow called ‘life-giving and death-dealing’ sentences... It's the humid, fevered, magniloquent, Bible-cadenced, comma-starved, word-drunk prose of what some fans consider his masterwork, Suttree... There's a lot here. It might make your head spin... What it all adds up to--perhaps surprisingly--is a doomed and unsettling love story, a Platonic tragedy.... Electric and thunderous… An astonishing pair of novels… Taken together,
The Passenger and Stella Maris are an intellectually breathtaking achievement.”
–Jonathan Miles, Garden & Gun

“This gripping mystery is sure to satisfy readers of one of our most acclaimed living authors.”
—Chicago Review of Books

“The darkness of McCarthy’s subject matter, combined with a high-flown style that earns him comparisons to William Faulkner and James Joyce, has contributed to his legend as perhaps the greatest living American author…At a time when the dominant strain of American writing is still ‘autofiction,’ …McCarthy’s epic, blood-drenched tales of the American South and Southwest are a throwback to a time when novelists wrote big books about big questions and had the temerity to think they could answer them…Death and violence are his great subjects, which he approaches with philosophical rigour and theological depth.”
–Park Macdougald, UnHerd
 
“A compelling read…
The Passenger is, to coin a phrase, a pre-apocalyptic novel… McCarthy has a lilting legato to his prose; usually quiet, sometimes unexpected. The word ‘gray’ is seeded across the novel…There is no black or white in this ashen world.”
–Stuart Kelly, The Scotsman

“Chilling and masterly.... His prose frequently approaches the Shakespearean, ranging from droll humor to the rapid-fire spouting of quotable fecundity. Dialogues click into place like a finely tuned engine. McCarthy has somehow added a new register to his inimitable voice. Long ensconced in the literary firmament, McCarthy further bolsters his claim for the Mount Rushmore of the literary arts.”
–Booklist, starred

"A beguiling, surpassingly strange novel by the renowned—and decidedly idiosyncratic—author of
Blood Meridian (1982) and The Road (2006)… It’s all vintage McCarthy, if less bloody than much of his work: Having logged time among scientists as a trustee at the Santa Fe Institute, he’s now more interested in darting quarks than exploding heads…Plenty of his trademark themes and techniques are in evidence, from conspiracy theories…and shocking behavior…to flights of beautiful language…Enigmatic, elegant, extraordinary: a welcome return after a too-long absence."
Kirkus Reviews, starred

“A rich story of an underachieving salvage diver in 1980 New Orleans... This thriller narrative is intertwined with the story of Western’s sister, Alicia… He dazzles with his descriptions of a beautifully broken New Orleans… The book’s many pleasures will leave readers aching for the final installment.”
Publishers Weekly

The Passenger is worthy of becoming your favorite new literary drug, a multifaceted jewel of a book that will keep you up all night reading and thinking…There is also plenty of grim laugh-out-loud humor scattered in the tales of war, death and love…[The Passenger] is required and unforgettable reading that will make you even more impatient to encounter its companion.”
—Joe Hartlaub, Book Reporter

About the Author

The novels of the American writer Cormac McCarthy have received a number of literary awards, including the Pulitzer Prize, the National Book Award, and the National Book Critics Circle Award. His works adapted to film include All the Pretty Horses, The Road, and No Country for Old Men—the latter film receiving four Academy Awards, including the award for Best Picture. He died in 2023.

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Cormac McCarthy
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Cormac McCarthy was born in Rhode Island. He later went to Chicago, where he worked as an auto mechanic while writing his first novel, The Orchard Keeper. The Orchard Keeper was published by Random House in 1965; McCarthy's editor there was Albert Erskine, William Faulkner's long-time editor. Before publication, McCarthy received a travelling fellowship from the American Academy of Arts and Letters, which he used to travel to Ireland. In 1966 he also received the Rockefeller Foundation Grant, with which he continued to tour Europe, settling on the island of Ibiza. Here, McCarthy completed revisions of his next novel, Outer Dark. In 1967, McCarthy returned to the United States, moving to Tennessee. Outer Dark was published in 1968, and McCarthy received the Guggenheim Fellowship for Creative Writing in 1969. His next novel, Child of God, was published in 1973. From 1974 to 1975, McCarthy worked on the screenplay for a PBS film called The Gardener's Son, which premiered in 1977. A revised version of the screenplay was later published by Ecco Press. In the late 1970s, McCarthy moved to Texas, and in 1979 published his fourth novel, Suttree, a book that had occupied his writing life on and off for twenty years. He received a MacArthur Fellowship in 1981, and published his fifth novel, Blood Meridian, in 1985. All the Pretty Horses, the first volume of The Border Trilogy, was published in 1992. It won both the National Book Award and the National Book Critics Circle Award and was later turned into a feature film. The Stonemason, a play that McCarthy had written in the mid-1970s and subsequently revised, was published by Ecco Press in 1994. Soon thereafter, the second volume of The Border Trilogy, The Crossing, was published with the third volume, Cities of the Plain, following in 1998. McCarthy's next novel, No Country for Old Men, was published in 2005. This was followed in 2006 by a novel in dramatic form, The Sunset Limited, originally performed by Steppenwolf Theatre Company of Chicago. McCarthy's most recent novel, The Road, was published in 2006 and won the Pulitzer Prize.

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  • Reviewed in the United States on October 31, 2022
    I haven't written an Amazon review in years, but will come out of "retirement" for this one.

    Forget what you think you know about McCarthy as a writer. Those hoping for a retread of his earlier books will be sorely disappointed by this one. The style is unmistakably McCarthy--indeed, "The
    Passenger" features some of the author's finest observations, clearest prose, and punchiest dialogue--but aside from that, the reader is in brand new territory.

    Narratively speaking, the plot is all over the place. From the smoky barrooms of N'awlins to a deserted oil rig off the Florida coast to shacks in the Louisiana bayou and the wilds of Idaho, to a psychiatric hospital in Wisconsin, the story's geography skips around almost as much as its subject matter. Underlying everything is a palpable sense of dread, paranoia, existential despair. What does the government want from Bobby Western? To what extent are the sins of a father visited on his children? What is the fundamental nature of reality? What is the ultimate nature of God? And what does any of this have to do with a passenger missing from a downed plane's manifest? This is a novel of questions, not answers. Anyone expecting the latter will be left empty-handed.

    Much will be made of McCarthy's mid-novel, ten-page riff on quantum physics, string theory, and nuclear thermodynamics. I'll admit these pages did little for me and the book would not have been any the poorer for having left them out. But McCarthy is 89 and he's spent decades hobnobbing with scientists at the Santa Fe Institute--I won't begrudge him his passions and interests, especially when the rest of the novel is so richly-imagined. Among other wonders, he invests the platonic yet deeply sensual relationship between Bobby and Alicia Western with the pathos of Greek tragedy, while providing enough scientific and historical arcana to keep the most devoted conspiracy theorist busy for a good, long time. Add to this the Thalidomide Kid--one of the most sinister, charismatic antagonists in all of McCarthy's fiction--and a vibrant cast of supporting characters, mix in a good deal of humor and heart (two qualities in short supply in much of his earlier work) and you have a recipe for something (beautifully) new.

    I don't think "The Passenger" can be fairly reviewed without giving it time to "set"--and perhaps a second reading. (I discount my own review for that very reason.) There will be plenty of folks--even McCarthy devotees--who will not enjoy this book at all for the fact that it's so dense, so resistant to neat interpretation. If I had to compare it to McCarthy's past novels, I suppose it's most similar to "Suttree," for its depictions of a highly-literate man who finds himself "outside" society.

    Those willing to watch a master try something new and revolutionary late in his career will find a great deal to applaud here. It's a messy, messy book for a messy, messy world.
    72 people found this helpful
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  • Reviewed in the United States on January 11, 2023
    So, I read Blood Meridian recently, a number of years after having read and thoroughly enjoyed the Border Trilogy and The Road. While I did not enjoy Blood Meridian nearly as much, there is no question that it contained large sections of stunningly descriptive writing. McCarthy recently released this novel (the first of a pair) and I elected to take it on.

    McCarthy is, quite simply, the most descriptive writer I’ve ever been exposed to. However, as in Blood Meridian, I found some sections hard to follow. In Blood Meridian, McCarthy pens long paragraphs in Spanish, with no translation of what is being said. In The Passenger, he goes off on a 6-8 page exposition on the subject of complex physics, which I promise you, not one person in 10,000 could possibly hope to understand.

    It raises the question, “how did he write it.” I don’t think that he is a physicist. I’ve got to think the text is accurate. Did he school himself sufficiently in particle physics to pen the dialogue?

    He also frequently has many pages of back-and-forth dialogue (excellently written) that ultimately becomes confusing when trying to figure out which character is speaking.

    The story follows a character named Bobby Western, something of a loner/wanderer who stumbles across something that places him in great danger. A second thread deals with his sister, Alicia, a paranoid schizophrenic. McCarthy’s accounts of her hallucinations are masterful.

    In any event, Bobby is on the run, from whom and from what is never fully explained. His father was a contemporary of Oppenheimer and this is touched upon from time to time. There is an absolutely brilliant conversation concerning the Kennedy assassination.

    As in Blood Meridian, McCarthy displays flashes of brilliance, at others is borderline unreadable. In the end, the good outweighs the bad.
    46 people found this helpful
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  • Reviewed in the United States on November 17, 2022
    I am two-thirds through the book and I just want it to be over so I can read something better (at least for me). I’ve read Blood Meridian, The Road, NCFOM, ATPH and so far I would place The Passenger below these. I’ll follow this through and finish. I had liked his more recent books up until now.

    Expect a thin plot and sets of conversations that don’t necessarily lead to anything. Someone will talk a while about Vietnam, someone will talk about cars, someone will talk about drilling, a man in a dirty house will give his perspective, families will have family conversations. A girl talks to an odd set of characters. It meanders as life meanders. There are moments when McCarthy gets descriptive and “McCarthyish” but even that is here and there. Seems like over the years McCarthy would get interested in some topic and add it somewhere into this book.

    Regarding books (imo), there is plot, there is character, there is prose, and there is overall construction/organization. I love it when books have all of these. McCarty is a prose author to me. He can write about dead children in a tree in a scarily beautiful way. In this book we can glean things here and there about character, but it’s not heavy with character (like McMurtry is rich in characters). With this book there is to me, less in all of these categories.

    McCarthy certainly has his fandom who will like this latest offering. I’ll stick with it for now, but I don’t see me reading this ever again or looking forward to a further installment. Too many other authors out there.
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  • Kindle Customer
    2.0 out of 5 stars Difficult to Read
    Reviewed in France on January 31, 2023
    At some moment I thought I was reading steinbeck

    Many story lines intertwined

    Maybe I need to read it again 🤔
  • Rossana Resende
    5.0 out of 5 stars Otimo
    Reviewed in Brazil on April 6, 2024
    Linda história
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  • deegs
    5.0 out of 5 stars I think I would have found this book funny if a hadn't of read it.
    Reviewed in Australia on February 22, 2025
    "People will go to strange lengths to avoid the suffering they have coming."
    Just don't avoid don't reading.
  • JR in Kingston
    5.0 out of 5 stars One of the most expansive books I've ever read
    Reviewed in Canada on June 3, 2023
    This book is a book that engages huge questions about ontology and principles of science while nominally writing about a few larger than life characters that are powerfully drawn. While its scope is broad and the length may be daunting, the prose is accessible and seductive. There were many passages I reread because they were so lyrical. This has to be one of the most beautiful, inspirational books I have read in my life. Months later I find myself going back to the marked up sections to be reminded what powerful writing looks like.
  • Casper
    5.0 out of 5 stars McCarthy & a Titanic submersible disappearing in the same week? A coincidence? Me thinks not.
    Reviewed in the Netherlands on June 20, 2023
    'The Passenger' is a testament to McCarthy's literary prowess. A story that stays with you long after the last page, just as McCarthy's legacy will. The best writer of our time.