Cormac McCarthy - No Country for Old Men (2005)
** spoiler alert ** No Country for Old Men  is a great book at two levels - style and content. You  have to engage with the laconic vernacular of the US Southwestern border country and observe  how McCarthy uses it to show how a few words in the right context can  get you far deeper into the emotions (or lack of them) of the main  protagonists than any long-winded description of feelings. In forty years McCarthy has honed his art far from the excessive literariness of The Orchard Keeper  to create a linguistic realism that is great literature. He  manages the rare feat of showing how a basic decency, a sentimental  decency, triumphs morally over cunning and intellect. He reminds us that  'sentiment', that is feeling one's values as givens without too much  analysis, is not to be despised by those whose default mode is knowing  irony. There is nothing post-modern about this book. As for the content, this is a deeply political book, without once mentioning politics as most re...