Cormac McCarthy’s All
the Pretty Horses paints an image of a dying West: a West that is no longer
what it used to be. It is through this changed, more modernized western
landscape that McCarthy explores the idealized tropes of the western hero, the
cowboy and the romantic vision of the lifestyle of western settlement. It is
also through this unromantic view of the land and space that McCarthy is able
to create John Grady Cole’s character to be a failed version of the
stereotypical western hero. John Grady strives continuously to live in the way
of the West that had been popular during his grandfather’s era. But, just as
the old West is passing away, John Grady’s grandfather’s ranch is passed along
to the highest bidder, representing the loss of a possibility at an idyllic
Western ranching lifestyle.
In All the Pretty
Horses, the West in America is not “Western” enough for John Grady’s
ideals, and so he chooses to go to Mexico, in hopes that he can achieve his
desires there. John Grady fails to achieve anything but fleeting success and
romance through out the book, thus proving him to be a failed western hero,
unable to accomplish what true western men easily achieve. He is also unable to
maintain the cowboy code of justice and honor, shown when he tries to return
the horse to it’s rightful owner, but cannot find said owner at all. Though John
Grady’s stoic, “man-of-few-words” persona lasts through the entirety of the
novel, he ultimately rides off, “into the darkening land, the world to come” as
a man with no true place that he owns and belongs to (302). He is uprooted, a
wanderer, still searching for an ideal that cannot be achieved. It is in this
way that McCarthy examines how the cowboy stereotype shifts and ultimately
fails within a new, more modern West.
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