Cormac McCarthy, the Pulitzer Prize-winning novelist known for 'The Road' and 'Blood Meridian,' has died at age 89
McCarthy died of natural causes at his home in Santa Fe, New Mexico, Knopf said. Over a nearly 60-year career, McCarthy – hailed by the late literary critic Howard Bloom as the “true heir” of Herman Melville and William Faulkner – wrote a dozen novels, many of them critically celebrated if not commercial hits, though he would eventually achieve both. For years, he wrote while living on grants, most notably the MacArthur “genius grant,” which he was awarded in 1981.
“And he would tell them that everything he had to say was there on the page. So we would eat beans for another week.” But McCarthy didn’t become a writer to make money, instead “maybe simply, because I can do it,” he told the Maryville-Alcoa Times, a Tennessee newspaper, in 1971. “There are a lot of easier ways to make money. I could sell tickets to people and let them watch while I was run over by a truck.” His next novel, “Suttree,” was published in 1979.
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