‘Vanity Fair’ Faces Major Backlash Over Cormac McCarthy Scoop
A profile of literary icon Cormac McCarthy’s “secret muse” is causing a stir for Vanity Fair, as other publications and social media users alike criticize the magazine for “messing up the literary scoop of the year.”
The Telegraph notes Vanity Fair “ruined” the big reveal with “questionable writing,” while Defector wondered why the magazine’s profiler couldn’t just “write normally” about McCarthy’s “fascinating” muse, Augusta Britt.
The piece’s author Vincenzo Barney characterizes Britt as a “a five-foot-four badass Finnish American cowgirl,” before describing her and McCarthy’s decades-long relationship through Britt’s eyes, which began when she met 42-year-old McCarthy near a motel pool when she was 16 years old. According to the profile, Britt maintained a relationship with the author until his death last year at age 89—and their relationship would inspire McCarthy’s books’ characters for decades.
“I loved him more than anything,” she told the magazine in the piece, which obscures the disturbing details of the the runaway teen’s sexual involvement with McCarthy as she enjoyed his “protection” and escaped from a life “in and out of foster care.” For example, Britt only “jokes” that McCarthy is a “groomer”—a term she says she uses as a “defense mechanism” as Barney continues to tell the story in the most flowery and romantic of terms.
Even the first sentence of the piece—“I’m about to tell you the craziest love story in literary history”—ignores that the romance in question involves a grown man and a teenager.
A takedown of the piece in The Telegraph called Barney’s prose “terrible, overwrought, nonsensical,” adding, “It is so bad that it isn’t even funny.” The primary issue, however, is Barney “seems to treat McCarthy’s pedophilic interest in the vulnerable teenager as a great love story,” the site critiqued.
feel very bad for this woman—not only because of the facts of her life, but because the public will not respond to this story in the way she hopes, and because she went with a profiler who is so immensely and obnoxiously pleased with himself https://t.co/kjaeXro1il
— rp (@sleepydisease) November 20, 2024
i have read the augusta britt and cormac mccarthy vanity fair story, and the only takeaway i have right now is that vincenzo barney is probably the last person on earth who should have written it.
— irene 🍂 (@irene_koo) November 20, 2024
Social media users agreed, with one posting a photo of Barney and accusing him of “glamorizing Cormac McCarthy’s pedophilia.”
this photo of the guy who wrote the vanity fair article valorizing cormac mccarthy’s pedophilia is a wonderful visual aid to pair with the displeasure of reading the piece https://t.co/YrCtfCB3EZ pic.twitter.com/efCnmVMMMV
— big deal soph (@sophiefairplay) November 20, 2024
when vanity fair pays by the word and you convince the editor you need to poorly emulate Cormac McCarthy style nature writing constantly in your international sex trafficking exposé https://t.co/cAnnrAJfVh pic.twitter.com/1bG4bnSWq6
— Adam Quinn (@adamquinn__) November 20, 2024
One reader called the profile an “international sex trafficking exposé” while another wrote that Barney was “positively drooling over the thought of an exploited, abused 16-year-old girl.”
Genuinely stunned this got published. The writer is positively drooling over the thought of an exploited, abused 16-year-old girl. He celebrates Cormac McCarthy's pedophilia (he was 42!) as "the craziest love story." What is going on here https://t.co/2moJrasfY6 pic.twitter.com/sqs1lIEDPd
— delaney (@delaney_nolan) November 20, 2024
As social media users declare that Barney was “the last person on earth” who should have written Britt’s story and seemed “endlessly pleased with himself,” even those willing to accept Britt’s stance that McCarthy wasn’t a “creep,” for pursuing her a teenager, are horrified by the quality of the writing itself.
In Defector’s takedown of the profile, it notes that “There’s a sort of next-level tragedy in [Britt], depicted in so incredibly many (doomed) forms in somebody else’s words, finally deciding to share her story with the world, in her own words, and choosing as custodians of those words a writing and editing team that will send those words out into the world hideously adorned.”
The Daily Beast has reached out to Barney for comment. And while he has not addressed the criticism directly, he does seem to be relishing the attention, reposting some of the harshest criticisms of his work on X.
"Unfortunately, the impact of Barney’s good work is undone by one inescapable fact: he cannot write. [...] If you want to play a game with Barney’s piece, close your eyes and scroll to a random paragraph to see if it makes any sense. Fair warning: you will never win. Barney is…
— Vincenzo Barney (@BarneysRubble0) November 21, 2024