This map plots the settings and references in The Road
To start exploring, click a red pin
Dead trees in the terraces of Mammoth Hot Springs, Yellowstone National Park, Montana, USA - Credit:
Mila Zinkova
Although the location is not confirmed, we are thrown into a bleak, post-apocalyptic setting born of Cormac McCarthy's experience, imagination and skill with words. An unexplained cataclysm has destroyed civilisation and ruined the landscape. The surroundings are desolate and devoid of colour. Ash hangs thickly in the air, forcing the father and son to wear face masks. The ash is so thick, in fact, it has blocked out the sun; the scorched vegetation has no chance of revival.
Dead Tree Chatham Islands - Credit:
Newsbie Pix Flickr
The book opens as winter approaches – a harsh, cold and dangerous time for which the man and his son must prepare. Setting off on the road, the man's aim is to reach the coast where he hopes to find warmer weather, good people, and better, safer living conditions. Relentless rain and bitter snow impede their journey, forcing them to take frequent shelter beneath a makeshift tarpaulin tent.
In an interview with Oprah Winfrey, Cormac McCarthy revealed that the spark of inspiration for the story came when visiting El Paso, Texas with his young son. Though many of his other books have been based in the southwest, clues indicate The Road to be set in the southeast of the United States, around the southern stretches of the Appalachian Mountains, suggesting the final destination and hoped-for salvation will be found on the Atlantic or Gulf coast. Raised in Knoxville, Tennessee, this is a part of the world that McCarthy knows well.
Dead trees at Johnston Ridge, State of Washington, United-States - Credit:
Barcar
'See Rock City' barn on U.S. Highway 441, in Sevier County, Tennessee - Credit:
Scott Basford, April 2006
Though not the only advertisement or billboard mentioned in the book, this one is a solid clue to the book's setting, placing it firmly in the southeast US. Rock City is a tourist attraction, a natural rock formation on Lookout Mountain, near Chattanooga, Tennessee.
Mount Mingus, viewed from the Sugarland Mountain Trail in the Great Smoky Mountains - Credit:
Brian Stansberry, 2008
Given that Cormac McCarthy was raised in Tennessee, there is much to support the theory that the man and boy are approaching the lower stretches of the Appalachian Mountain Range, perhaps the Great Smoky Mountains which are situated on the Tennessee-North Carolina border.
Linville Falls, North Carolina, USA - Credit: Ken Thomas, 2007
The dramatic waterfall – providing a rare moment of relief – may have been based on the Linville Falls in North Carolina, part of the Blue Ridge Mountains.
Exactly which coast the road has led to is unclear, but it is likely to be either the Atlantic coast of Georgia or South Carolina, or the Gulf coast of Florida.
If it's the Gulf coast, then a likely candidate for this "murky shape" is Panama City.
