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Suttree  By  cover art

Suttree

By: Cormac McCarthy
Narrated by: Richard Poe
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Publisher's summary

No discussion of great modern authors is complete without mention of Cormac McCarthy, whose rare and blazing talent makes his every work a true literary event. A grand addition to the American literary canon, Suttree introduces readers to Cornelius Suttree, a man who abandons his affluent family to live among a dissolute array of vagabonds along the Tennessee river.
©1979 Cormac McCarthy (P)2012 Recorded Books

Critic reviews

Suttree contains a humor that is Faulknerian … and a freakish imaginative flair reminiscent of Flannery O’Connor.” ( Times Literary Supplement, London)

What listeners say about Suttree

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  • Overall
    4 out of 5 stars
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    5 out of 5 stars
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    4 out of 5 stars

A fascinating story, well told

What did you love best about Suttree?

Unlike many of McCarthy's novels, this had moments of wit and humor. It also contains some of the most vivid prose I've ever heard.

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1 person found this helpful

  • Overall
    5 out of 5 stars
  • Performance
    5 out of 5 stars
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    5 out of 5 stars
  • Jw
  • 02-01-18

A masterpiece

Would you listen to Suttree again? Why?

I have read this book twice, I liked it so much I purchased the audiobook, which I was delighted to find added a whole other dimension to it.

What was one of the most memorable moments of Suttree?

The antics of Gene Harrowgate AKA the country mouse / the city rat.

Any additional comments?

A command performance by Richard Poe, his variety of voices brought characters alive.

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1 person found this helpful

  • Overall
    5 out of 5 stars
  • Performance
    5 out of 5 stars
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    5 out of 5 stars

The Great Narration

This audiobook is so well narrated I think it should be used as an example in audio narration classes.
Suttree itself relishes in its own well written narration.
The narration and the dialogue are seamless as if something grafted had no stitches visible to see where the cloth might tear.

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1 person found this helpful

  • Overall
    4 out of 5 stars
  • Performance
    4 out of 5 stars
  • Story
    4 out of 5 stars

Check Pronunciation

As someone who grew up in Blount County, I can tell you the local pronunciation is “blunt” with a short u, not ow as in cow. The reader never gets it right.

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1 person found this helpful

  • Overall
    3 out of 5 stars
  • Performance
    5 out of 5 stars
  • Story
    2 out of 5 stars

3/4 good Americana, 1/4 disjointed nonsense

I'm a sucker for early 1900's American storytelling, which makes this poor rating a surprise. McCarthy drops you into the life of Suttree, which is fine, but he jumps time, structure, and viewpoint. it's very hard to rejoin the story after you've taken a break, which you will need to do (it's 20 hours). The last 25% of this book is chock full of grossly lurid descriptions of women's pubic hair. Why? I don't know.

The narrator is great.

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  • Overall
    3 out of 5 stars
  • Performance
    3 out of 5 stars
  • Story
    4 out of 5 stars

Long..... Very long

What did you like best about Suttree? What did you like least?

It's kinda gross.... In a lot of places. I mean... Do fish guts and flatulence need pages of description ?

What did you like best about this story?

Not much

What three words best describe Richard Poe’s performance?

Not really remarkable

Was Suttree worth the listening time?

No

Any additional comments?

No country for old men is much better

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  • Overall
    5 out of 5 stars
  • Performance
    5 out of 5 stars
  • Story
    5 out of 5 stars

McCarthy Brilliant in a Different Genre

Which character – as performed by Richard Poe – was your favorite?

Poe's narration is staggeringly good.

Any additional comments?

I’ve been thinking a lot lately about the ‘conversation’ between Cormac McCarthy and Don DeLillo, two of the great writers we still have. DeLillo, it seems to me reflects on the ways in which we, as contemporary Americans, find ourselves trapped inside our culture. We understand ourselves as in a bubble of our own collective creation, and our implicit sadness (a sadness that rises to tragedy in Underworld) is that we realize we cannot escape it.

As a result, DeLillo’s work is at its best when the culture – more specifically the art – at its heart is at its best. Mao II is great because Bill Gray (whose work we never read) feels like a great novelist, a great silenced novelist. White Noise fails for me because the “art” at its center – the parody of academia he calls Hitler Studies – is flimsy and forgettable.

I say that because I see McCarthy arriving at a similar frustration from the other end. He dismisses art and culture almost out of hand. Instead, he calls us to remember that, no matter our accomplishments as a culture, we remain “primates” as much at the mercy of the greater heavens as when we huddled in caves 15 millenia ago. He presents his thesis in every sentence he writes. No matter the story, his subject stays the same. He’s like an Old Testament prophet in the clarity of his warning: we are not special in the eyes of creation.

As a consequence, I’m not sure it matters which McCarthy you read. Everything he does has an almost equal excellence. There might as well be a McCarthy Reader, a collection of his greatest sentences and set-scenes. (And it would be a very long collection.)

That’s all prologue to saying that Suttree is just as great as virtually everything else I’ve read by McCarthy (and that’s everything he’s written in the last 30 years). Very little happens in this portrait of a determined loner, a man who’s turned his back on what privilege he has and determines to live by his means, but so what. Very little happens in Seinfeld and very little happens in Flaubert’s Un Coeur Simple. And that was the point of each. If you have a gift for exploring tone and the character of a person who is interesting even at rest, then you have all you need.

There are brilliant scenes here, too. In the opening, Suttree is fishing and he reflects on the idea of St. Peter as a “fisher of men.” Then, not much later, he sees a police barge that has just dredged up a suicide. He sees the body, a hook lodged through its check, and the metaphor becomes real…and staggering. You can’t help asking, “What are we?” What kind of creatures are we if we can die in such a tawdry and undignified way? And the answer is one we simply don’t want to hear.

Another brilliant passage comes when he is looking at an album of old photos with his aunt. He looks at the once beautiful faces of people he knows in their old age, and he gets off a passage (I can’t find the exact words just now) so staggering that it made my jaw drop, asking what sort of a god would choose flesh like ours as the site of a presumed individuality.

It’s blunt, brutal and deeply theological – theological in the oldest sense of the term, in the sense of a lost and dazed creature looking to the sky to make sense of suffering. It’s flat-out awe-inspiring work. To take just one example, “I always figured there was a god,” says an old man who has extracted from Suttree a promise to burn his body after he dies. “I just never did like him much.”

That said, I find myself thinking that part of McCarthy’s project is to explore genre with his powerful voice and focused imagination. He came to fame as a writer of “Westerns,” in Blood Meridian and the Border Trilogy. That’s four novels and 20 years, but it’s also only two projects. Since then he has clearly been playing in other genres; The Road is a post-apocalyptic book, and No Country for Old Men is, by narrative structure, a hardboiled noir thriller.

As such, at least in retrospect, I see Suttree as a kind of Southern-flavored Beat novel. Like On the Road, it has no real structure, and it’s driven by a perpetual hunger for experience. What’s more, that experience sits in opposition to – is subject to the disapproval of – law-abiding and conventional society.

I’m not saying it’s merely a Beat novel; it’s infused with all of McCarthy’s meditations on the primal power of the world and with his exploration of inherited religion to explain it. Still, as I wrap this one up, it seems to me interesting to think of this novel confirming the extent to which McCarthy – with that mythic voice and prophetic focus – needs the structure of genre to tell his take in its entirety.

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  • Overall
    3 out of 5 stars
  • Performance
    4 out of 5 stars
  • Story
    3 out of 5 stars

Not sure

Sort of a meandering, not sure what the point was in the sense of the story being told

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  • Overall
    3 out of 5 stars
  • Performance
    3 out of 5 stars
  • Story
    3 out of 5 stars

Good not great

This book about Tennessee's 'other side of the tracks' is Written like a western. This is a slow moving story about the main character and his misadventures with various miscreants and vagabonds.

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  • Overall
    5 out of 5 stars
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    5 out of 5 stars
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    5 out of 5 stars

A good story written with poetic prose

McCarthy’s ability to tell a good tale with prose that paint great pictures in the mind of his readers, is stunning. This story about poor men living in Tennessee, with hard times and some good ones too, is made so much better with McCarthy’s writing. I recommend it for readers that enjoy great writing.

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