Reclusive novelist appears on 'Oprah'
Dave Monroe
against.the.dave at gmail.com
Tue Jun 5 12:53:05 CDT 2007
POSTED: 1:01 p.m. EDT, June 5, 2007
CHICAGO, Illinois (AP) -- Oprah Winfrey got Pulitzer Prize-winning
novelist Cormac McCarthy to do the one thing he hates most: talk about
his work.
"You probably shouldn't be talking about it, you probably should be
doing it," the 73-year-old author told Winfrey in a rare TV interview,
which aired Tuesday on "The Oprah Winfrey Show."
The press shy McCarthy said he has nothing against the media, but that
he doesn't believe he should be talking about what he does -- a trait
Winfrey illustrated with a story about how McCarthy, when he had no
money years ago, refused a speaking engagement that would have paid
him $2,000.
"You work your side of the street, I'll work mine," he said in an
interview that was taped at the Santa Fe Institute in New Mexico.
The interview follows Winfrey's announcement in March that she had
chosen McCarthy's "The Road" for her book club.
On Tuesday's show, Winfrey announced that "Middlesex," a Pulitzer
Prize-winning novel by Jeffrey Eugenides, was her latest selection.
Published in 2002, the book is an epic about a Greek-American who is a
hermaphrodite -- someone born with both male and female sexual organs.
"I promise it will grab you from the first sentence," she said.
During Winfrey's interview with McCarthy, the author said that while
typically he doesn't know what generates the ideas for his books, he
can trace "The Road" to a trip he took with his young son to El Paso,
Texas, about four years ago.
There, standing at the window of a hotel in the middle of the night,
his son asleep nearby, he started to imagine what El Paso might look
like 50 or 100 years in the future.
"I just had this image of these fires up on the hill ... and I thought
a lot about my little boy," he said. He wrote some of his thoughts
down and didn't really think about it again until he was in Ireland a
few years later and the novel came to him.
"There was a book, and it was about that man and that little boy," he said.
"The Road," this year's winner of the Pulitzer Prize for fiction, is
about a father and his son as they wander through a barren
post-nuclear landscape. It is dedicated to McCarthy's son, John
Francis, and the author acknowledged that he wouldn't have written it
had he not had a son.
Having a child as an older man also had its effect on McCarthy. "It
wrenches you up out of your nap and makes you look at things fresh,"
he said. "It forces the world on you, and I think it's a good thing."
Winfrey was clearly fascinated with McCarthy's life, particularly the
time when he was so poor that he once was tossed out of a $40-a-month
hotel because he couldn't pay his bill.
He told a story of living in a "shack in Tennessee," having so little
money that he could not afford to buy toothpaste when he ran out, only
to discover a free sample of toothpaste in his mailbox.
"Just when things were really, really bleak something would happen," he said.
Winfrey could also not seem to get over how little McCarthy cares
about success, that it didn't matter to him that millions of people
read his books now compared to a few thousand in years past.
"You are a different kind of author, let me tell you," she said, chuckling.
http://www.cnn.com/2007/SHOWBIZ/books/06/05/books.winfrey.ap/index.html
THE EXCLUSIVE INTERVIEW WITH CORMAC MCCARTHY
Watch Oprah's interview with Cormac McCarthy. In a rare interview,
Cormac McCarthy sits down with Oprah to talk about his life and work.
Come back at 4 p.m. ET to watch never-seen-before moments from their
conversation.
http://www2.oprah.com/obc_classic/featbook/road/interview/road_interview_main.jhtml
http://www2.oprah.com/obc_classic/featbook/road/obc_featbook_road_main.jhtml
http://www2.oprah.com/index.jhtml
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