Friday, January 17, 2014


The Road by Cormac McCarthy is a futuristic novel based on an apocalyptic journey of one man and his son beginning their new lives as strangers to the new world. The fathers death leads the boy to understand what being alone is, to be bold. The father does everything he can to help his son survive. In the process, he teaches his son to be couragious and brave; teaching him the skills to survive. He devotes his life on saving him, “ My job is to take care of you. I was appointed to do that by God. I will kill anyone who touches you,” (77). His son understands that his father is his life, he cannot do anything without him. Alone he feels frightened, all the worries in his hand. As the novel progresses, the father continues to fight hunger and sickness, all for his son. He knows he cannot go on, but struggles to continue. “ He slept close to his father that night and held him but when he woke up in the morning his father was cold and stiff,” (281). The boy is now alone. His father’s death is devistating, but realizes he can be bold. He can keep on moving, using all of the skills his father showed him. When approached, the son asks a man “ Are you carrying the fire,” (283) That was a significant question his father used to reasurre his son. He used it to remind his son that a person carrying the fire is a good person. His fathers death allowed the boy to use his strategies in order to find the “good guys”. A father will always teach their son to do the right things, and teach them to be brave and smart. The father taught his son to be couragious, in order to survive. This sheds light on the universal truth of triumph through drastic circumstances. Once the father died, the boy had to learn to push the the difficulty.

Monday, December 16, 2013

Welcome!

This blog is for academic purposes, and will publish samples of my processed work.