Cormac McCarthy’s secret muse, the internet, and meVincenzo Barney on making a life-changing connection in the comments sectionThere’s a curious resonance between writers and the names of their first biographers. Proust, for instance, twinkles in the eye of his infatuate Painter. Nabokov playfully outfoxes and hides in his Field. Larkin is blurred in Motion. Bellow wobbles blandly on his shrugging Atlas. Amis is led astray by his Leader. Inaccuracies persist by the dozen in Hemingway’s Baker. Now, I am no biographer, but as they say in the U.K., Cormac McCarthy and Augusta Britt (the most significant muse in American literary history) got into a bit of a Barney last month, thanks to a profile I wrote for Vanity Fair. I had done the unconscionable thing of telling the story of Augusta Britt and Cormac McCarthy’s half-a-century relationship—which inspired several famous novels and characters—from Augusta’s own perspective and in my own style. It went viral, becoming Vanity Fair’s second-most-read story of 2024. The response was just what a debut writer dreams of reading: it was suggested I be jailed. More than one online bystander paid me the courtesy of writing in private to say that, really, the honorable thing would be to end my life, and provided several helpful scenarios and detailed how-to’s on how this could be pulled off. Meanwhile, those more diplomatic of heart suggested a petition merely be circulated, barring me from ever writing or publishing again. Not all of the feedback was focused on my prose. But here I am, writing again. And once more, it’s all Substack’s fault. In the autumn of 2022, Cormac McCarthy’s final novels, The Passenger and Stella Maris, were released months apart in a dyad. (Now, dyad’s the type of word I used in Vanity Fair that really got under the skin of people who purportedly love language. Modern decorum requires a prose so frictionless as to be nearly indistinguishable from having read anything at all. And that’ll be the next critical innovation: not reading at all. But here I am, swelling up a pair of parentheses, another taboo!) Nobody knew McCarthy’s writing better than me, according to me. So with only a 500-word Air Mail credit to my name, I humbly wrote to several magazines, journals, and literary and culture sites. “Let me procure an advance copy and review these novels. You can’t go wrong.” No one responded. It all went wrong. It was almost as if a petition had gone round barring me from… Anyway, not being anyone’s charming nephew but having met writer Deborah Copaken (who runs a great Substack called Ladyparts) and been encouraged by her to take matters into my own hands, I decided to take matters into my own hands. I created my Substack, Barney's Rubble. I waited patiently for McCarthy’s novels to find their way to Barnes & Noble and began to write my review. A 10,000-word essay, really, that indulges Cormac McCarthy’s entire oeuvre—I word I don’t disagree is pretentious—and assesses his final novels from within it. I wrote it on nights and lunch breaks and weekends between my day job, and it took me months, through the holidays, through the beginnings of spring. On March 31st, I decided my essay, “Cormac McCarthy Stumps in Florida,” could be no more improved upon nor tweaked by me and my indefatigable red pen. On April 1st, I put my last images and links in place and published it. To my shock, my essay actually got some attention and won me about one hundred subscribers over the course of a month—many of them from Substack’s own recommendation engine. I learned that there really was a vibrant community here, one that was shockingly interested in reading essays containing words like “dyad.” That night I received a comment on my essay of such cryptic honesty and artistic enigmatism, it could only have been written by someone very well read and with intimate knowledge of McCarthy. It was written to me in staves:
The formulation of these sentences was so literary, the syntax so McCarthyan. “These last many years he has taken up drinking again” sounds like the opening of some anti-Blood Meridian: “See the old man. He is pale and thin, he wears a thin and ragged linen shirt. He stokes the scullery fire… These last many years he has taken up drinking again.” A game of cat and mouse ensued, with me trying to learn more about the commenter. It still being April 1st, I responded with something utterly foolish: “I’m very sorry to hear this about Cormac. It sounds like you know him.” Days went by. I responded again, and another, even more cryptically detailed comment came:
It was from Augusta Britt, the most consequential muse in American literature. Months later I would screenshot but delete these comments to protect Augusta’s privacy and to cover my tracks from other researchers—wisely, it would turn out, as several writers and biographers have tried in vain to get Augusta’s story from her over the last year. When Cormac McCarthy passed away in June of 2023, I wrote an email to Augusta, offering her my condolences. (Yes, I thought up something much less boneheaded than “It sounds like you knew him.”) She wrote back and suggested we talk on the phone. The rest, as they say, is history. Moreover, I am too entertained by the internet speculation about what must have gone on between the lines, editorially, existentially, Augustally, to ruin the fun of anonymous critics. But I suppose I will pull back the curtain, only just. We began talking on the phone every other night. It was summer by this point, so the day’s stage lights stayed lit until 7, 8 p.m. I sat on the porch of my family home with the phone to my ear as darkness descended, with all its dramatic, theatric possibilities. Covered in night grain, I sat listening as Augusta told me of her entire life. Her childhood, meeting Cormac at that motel pool, running off to Mexico. We connected instantly, we made each other double over in laughter, we shared our saddest, hardest moments. One night she missed a call. It was monsoon season and she’d been caught between two floods on a road out in “wildcat country.” I’d never been to Tucson, never been to the Southwest, so everything she told me excitingly strained my imaginative abilities. Her life adventures always featured epic weather or dramatic mountain ranges or those endless ocean-haunted deserts. My pen started to move across the pages of my notebook. Cormac appeared to me in a dream with his fingertips shining with light. I thought, “How do you not write All the Pretty Horses after meeting Augusta?” One day, she told me that she would never tell anyone else her story. “You carry the light,” she said. And so I carried it as best I could out to Tucson. Augusta put such wild, beautiful images in my head that when I finally visited the Southwest, everything I saw was in her style. Her pull, her gravity, is just that strong. There is no one like her. I will never be able to thank her or repay her for entrusting me with her story and with over a year of her life. It has changed my own life forever. My only regret in any of this is that Augusta has had to endure the worst of the online reactions, which was her greatest fear in going public: being misunderstood and not taken seriously. Many of the most viral public reactions on both social and legacy media immediately decentered Augusta from her own story, stripped her of agency, and then proceeded to take me to task for having respected her perspective on her relationship with Cormac McCarthy, whom she considers the most important person in her life. I consider the claim that an adult woman cannot be the authority on her own life to be contrary to the very ethos these critics claim to espouse: that a woman is the authority on her own life. Besides being a glaring hypocrisy, I find the violent expression of this contradiction (contradictions are often expressible only through violence and aggression) aimed at Augusta herself to be immoral. It is not surprising that the most self-valorizing attacks passing as thought were written on black rectangular mirrors we call smartphones when we aim them at our faces. Yes, today’s written discourse is propagated mostly by thumb wars, a child’s game. And it shows. I have seen very little compassion or serious thinking. I have seen Augusta Britt’s dismissal out of hand—especially by those claiming to be outraged by what she had to “endure.” Everywhere but Substack, it would turn out, where many writers have published great pieces on it. Anything I accomplish from here on out in my career, I owe and dedicate eternally to you, Augusta. And a lot of it will be done right here, on Substack. |
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Cormac McCarthy’s secret muse, the internet, and me
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