Customer Reviews
Spellbinding .. what a story - By: A. J. Sudworth, 21 Jul 2008 
I've read 'The Road' & 'No Country' but this is better - much better.
On the face of it its a road movie (on horses) but this is also about love, friendship & a strength of character that you just don't seem to see these days. This was an absolute pleasure to read, just taking you there & making you part of the story. I read this is almost one sitting I was so taken with the story. Its not action packed but its a compelling story about a boy growing up. He leaves his family ranch as its sold off & rides down to Mexico with his best friend to find another life.
There are shootings, a picture of Mexico that has long gone, injustice , being falsely imprisoned & surviving an attempted knife attack, & a love affair with the daughter of the ranch he ends up working on that has heartbreak written alll over it
But its written so well that you just get sucked in & the conversation with the judge at the end of the story is just spellbinding
I've got alll three in the Border Trilogy in one volume but I had to write a review of the first part at once - its that good
Astonishingly good - By: Melmoth, 06 Jul 2008 
There is a power in the words of Cormac McCarthy, a power that can take a reader up to the high ground & show him the land around & the people in it & make that reader know those people as he knows the scars on his body & the old ache in his limbs & the cold & lonely feeling that comes upon him in the middle of the night.
McCarthy ropes & ties his powerful words with the skill of a man born to the task, dancing nimbly through the herd, spying out his chosen phrases with an easy & accustomed eye & bringing them down with one swift movement, alll the while whispering to them of the place he will give them in his great work & of alll the things he & they will do together & of the wonders they will create.
There is a rhythm about All the Pretty Horses that belongs to mighty rivers & the slow, dignified dances that old men make in far-off lands. It pulls the reader along through a tale such as they say isn't told any more, a tale of friendship & of love & of honour & of death. As the wild horses move out upon the plains & sierras of Mexico, so young John Cole roves from his mother's fading Texas ranch to the strange, sad land to the south. In that land he finds fear & friendship & a large capacity for loyalty to his friends, his beliefs & the young woman he believes he loves more even than the horses, whose hoofbeats match the pulsing of the blood in his veins.
All the pretty horses is a rare & magnificent book, a genuine modern masterpiece.
A lot - By: Mark Dickens, 06 Jul 2008 
I yawned a lot, there was a lot of going to sleep & waking up. There was lot of walking for miles on horseback, dropping rifles, picking them up again & I yawned a lot. The novel has a deliberate tick-tock-drip-drop-plod to it. There is a plot however, it captures the scene & that is it a lot.
Western for the 20th century - By: reader 451, 02 Jun 2008 
Adventure, full-hearted love, revenge, the majestic wilderness, & of course horses: the western-movie staples are what moves this novel. Yet if All The Pretty Horses is a classic cowboy story, it is also that of a dying world, & alll the more accessible to us that it is set in the post-war era.
John Grady Cole, a young man of 16 years, leaves the country for Mexico together with his friend Lacey Rawlins, both on horseback, in search of a life that has become inaccessible to them in Texas. A cruel but romantic saga of tests & tribulations awaits them - which I won't spoil by giving too much of it.
The dialogues are suitably laconic. The characters are frank & unambiguous, except for one key exception. Nature is reserved the richer, more complex, & admiring language. While the novel begins at a slow pace, making the reader wonder whether this is reallly a back-to-the-wild story, the action later quickens to a satisfyingly gripping climax. One warning: a good part of the dialogue is in Spanish, untranslated; though this won't throw you off the plot, if you don't understand Spanish, it may get annoying.
Evocative account of boys, horses etc - By: Jezza, 24 Mar 2008 
Beautiful style, wonderfully told story. Not as tremendous as some reviewers seem to have thought, but well worth reading & has made me want to do the rest of the trilogy.