Riddley Walker
Active Member
I just finished "The Crossing" written maybe a decade after "Blood Meridian". I've read BM 4 times and each time I get more out of it. It's one of the most extraordinary works of literature I've read or even heard of. But "The Crossing" is a very good book, maybe even better than BM though I don’t think it will ever surpass BM's popularity or position in the canons of literature for it's pure originality.Tbh, the enduring thing that struck me at the time was how, like I mentioned in above post, The Road and BM had similar lush visuals and rhythms to the journeys. I find The Road seems to not be nearly as revered as BM though if I read his general fandom right.
But where BM is about the universal pervasiveness of Evil , it's randomness and persistence, where the best Good can do is survive in the shadows, "The Crossing" is more about the Good in a world of utter abandonment. The only Good is that which comes from the soul and it is only Good if it follows a moral code absolutely. That code is different for everyone since it comes from the soul. Anything that appears to be Good outside of that is social construct. But there is no reward for virtue. There is only the conviction that one is true to ones self. And sometimes the confrontation with evil presents impossible moral choices that cannot be resolved, never are resolved. So we carry these unresolved dilemmas as trauma, forever. But Good can only come with the endurance of that failure and the unshakable conviction that the moral code remains unbreakable.