Diesel has convinced me to participate in his contest to make him read stuff, so I suggest that he read Cormac McCarthy’s Blood Meridian.
I recommend this book for a few reasons. For one thing, it’s a sparse book. McCarthy doesn’t waste a single damned word. Not a syllable, even. There’s no Dickensian word-wasting, serial-writing, going on and on without really saying anything, while also constantly making asides, like this one, and that one, that you might have noticed I am extremely fond (to be sure, I’m not criticizing Dickens, I think he was a genius, and quite funny as well). McCarthy can say in a few words what it would take other authors a lifetime to write. He’s one of the few authors who can actually make a picture be worth no more than 15 or 20 words. It’s that kind of sparse.
However, to achieve that minimalism, it also tends to be dense. I’m a word-nerd. I love learning new words, and McCarthy doesn’t fail to satisfy, while simultaneously making me look like a retard. Every morning I’d stumble into work, bleary-eyed and slack-jawed after having spent hours reading a handful of pages with a list of adjectives to look up, and then once I’d learn the definitions I’d think to myself, “You arrogant fucker, you’ve done it again. You used the absolute perfect word to convey your image flawlessly. I hate you.” Seriously, if I ever meet McCarthy, I’m going to give him a swift kick in the nuts right after I’m done shaking his hand.
Which brings me to my final point; if you’re looking for hate, sadness, depression, and wish to uncover the obsidian black recesses of the human soul this Christmas, you can read no finer novel than Blood Meridian. I know what you’re thinking, “Why would I want to read about horrible things at Christmas? I want to read about puppy dogs and kitty cats saving Christmas from the evil robot ninja Jews!” Give me a break. You can read that garbage on the toilet while you’re squeezing out an hangover dump. You need to read Blood Meridian during the holidays because at any other time of the year you’re liable to read a few pages and think, “Well, mankind is at this point worse than the most horrible thing I can humanly comprehend, so I might as well kill myself.” Even if you read this during the holidays you might be best served by calling the suicide hot-line in advance and letting them know you’re taking this book on. They’ve been trained for this type of thing. Though, it doesn’t hurt to have copious amounts of alcohol on hand so you can drown your sorrows in beer and whiskey. You might want to add some NyQuil and make it an umbrella drink because that could be the only thing to knock out your consciousness long enough for you to forget the deplorable acts committed in this book.
Don’t get me wrong, it’s a fantastic book, and I have no reservations in recommending it, but it’s probably best saved until you’re in an extremely stable, healthy, and positive frame of mind or you might just blow your brains out.
Added: Here’s a sample of one of my favorite parts (borrowed from Tbogg, because, hey, great minds think alike, and fools never differ):
They began to come upon chains and packsaddles, singletrees, dead mules, wagons. Saddletrees eaten bare of their rawhide coverings and weathered white as bone, a light chamfering of miceteeth along the edges of the wood. They rode through a region where iron will not rust nor tin varnish. The ribbed frames of dead cattle under their patches of dried hide lay like the ruins of primitive boats upturned upon that shoreless void and they passed lurid and austere the black and desiccated shapes of horses and mules that travelers had stood afoot. These parched beasts had died with their necks stretched in agony in the sand and now upright and blind and lurching askew with scraps of blackened leather from the fretwork of their ribs they leaned with their long mouths howling after the endless tandem suns that passed above them. The riders rode on. They crossed a a vast dry lake with rows of dead volcanoes ranged beyond it like the works of enormous insects. To the south lay broken shapes of scoria in a lava bed as far as the eye could see. Under the hooves of the horses the alabaster sand shaped itself in whorls strangely symmetric like iron filings in a field and these shapes flared and drew back again, resonating upon that harmonic ground and then turning to swirl away over the playa. As if the very sediment of things contained yet some residue of sentinence. As if the transit of those riders were a thing so profoundly terrible as to register even to the uttermost granulation of reality.

“They traveled over a barren, arid wasteland littered with dessicated animal corpses and the skeletal tack and hitchings of those unfortunate to have traversed this cursed path before them, but failed.”
Not great prose, but more sparse. McCarthy’s seems a bit masturbatory to me. But I may give the book a try.
I have a headache.
No trouble with me, though I read about 30 more books a year then my English major wife I don’t understand enough of that paragraph to even midly comprehend what kind of statement on humanity he was trying to make. Other than that we are too stupid to know our own language.
“an hangover”?
“an hangover”
Yeah… That was annoying. What’s next God damn pretentious Harvard commas?
And then shortly after that, “…at any other time you the year…”. But that’s probably a typo. The “an hangover” thing was malicious!
And have the comments text always been this low contrast gray? Keep this up and you’ll have to put one of those Web 2.0 Beta logos on your blog.
I don’t know… Maybe I’m extra cranky today. It is the first day of Humbugosity.
CBK- It can be a little self-servicing, but if I wrote like McCarthy did, I’d do a little self-servicing too.
Jules- Find this woman some NyQuil!
DMC- My wife and I both have degrees in English, and she reads like crazy. Me? I like the movies.
jwer- I’m tired of dumbing it down for you.
Alan- Don’t be so pissy or I’ll skip right over the Harvard comma and go straight to the Oxford comma. Are you, really, considering the implications, however ridiculous, it may look?
There’s too many commas in that last comment. I’m not sure what you’re saying.
Besides, ignoring implications has made me what I am today! Wait… Do I mean implications or consequences. Maybe you meant consequences.
Oh well, back to my build…
But I’ve figured out why you don’t have an edit button. It’s easier just to point out mistaked in the comments and then have you fix them. I’ll have to see if that works in real life. Suppose I notice something wrong around the house, like some dirty dishes in the sink. I could just tell my lovely wife, “Hey wench! Dish duty. Get on it already!” Next thing you know, clean house. Half probably wouldn’t be mine anymore but that’s a bargain I think I might be able to live with. Yeah… Who am I kidding?
There’s too many commas in that last comment. I’m not sure what you’re saying.
Besides, ignoring implications has made me what I am today! Wait… Do I mean implications or consequences. Maybe you meant consequences.
Oh well, back to my build…
But I’ve figured out why you don’t have an edit button. It’s easier just to point out mistaked in the comments and then have you fix them. I’ll have to see if that works in real life. Suppose I notice something wrong around the house, like some dirty dishes in the sink. I could just tell my lovely wife, “Hey wench! Dish duty. Get on it already!” Next thing you know, clean house. Half probably wouldn’t be mine anymore but that’s a bargain I think I might be able to live with. Yeah… Who am I kidding?
Wow, that is dense. I’ll give it a shot, although I think my copy has some chamfering around the edges.
I just figured you were trying out a Cockney accent with the “an hangover” bit, guv.
Thanks, ACW! The rest of you are welcome to play as well!
To give Dickens some credit, he was being paid by the word.
Thanks for the recommended read. I thought that the suicide rate was worse at the holidays though? Or does just seem a greater contrast during this season? At UVa, they always showed “It’s a Wonderful Life” during finals week to minimize the chance that we’d give up and hurt or kill ourselves.