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Unknown Binding The Heart Is a Lonely Hunter Book

ISBN: 0812415809

ISBN13: 9780812415803

The Heart Is a Lonely Hunter

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Customer Reviews

5 ratings

The Heart is a Lonley Hunter

This is a brilliant novel set in a Georgia milltown during the Great Depression.Four people,struggling with their own identities, confide in a deaf mute. Dr. Copeland is a black physician suffering from TB who is estranged from his own family by his passionate devotion to protecting the rights of his race; Jake Blount, an alcoholic and border-line psychotic, who is tormented by his radical ideas of the rights of the working class, Biff Brannon a restaurant owner who is trying to come to terms with his own feelings following the death of his wife; and Mick Kelly, a sensitive teenage girl and daughter of the family who own the boarding house where the mute lives, .The four feel a special kinship to the mute, Mr. Singer, because of the sensitivity that each one must sense in him. Singer listens to their stories and asks them questions yet he gives little advice. Singer himself is a depressed by the decline, both physically and mentally, and institutionalization of his constant companion, another deaf mute, whose fate ultimately has a profound affect on Singer and his four confidants. The book deals subtly with several different social issues-racial strife in the South, a teenage girl coming to terms with her emerging sexuality, labor unrest, and the effect of the Great Depression on the middle class.

Tugs at chord of isolation we all have. Excellent book!

This 1940 novel by Carson McCullers is set in a small southern town. It's about five different people and their relationships to each other. There is surface structure inasmuch as the chapters move back and forth, focusing on one character and then another and moving the action forward. But there's an appealing off-center feeling to it all, as this study in what it means to be a human being reflects the human condition without having to tie it all up in a neat little package.Driving the story is John Singer, a deaf mute. When his friend Sprios, a fellow deaf mute, goes insane, John Singer attracts other alienated people, who pour their hearts out to him, believing that he understands everything. There's Jake, who drinks hard, requires constant stimulation of his senses to feel alive, and views the world though a communist philosophy. There's Dr. Copeland, a black physician, who so wants to improve the condition of his race, that he has driven his wife and children away because they never fit the picture of the way he wanted them to be. There's Mick, the adolescent girl, introspective and intuitive, who dreams of a future filled with music and travel. And then there is Biff, the owner of the Café, who collects old newspapers and tries to make sense out of what is going on around him. Everyone feels that the deaf-mute has some sort of magical presence. But yet, he too, proves to be very human.The town itself is important to the story, and Ms. McCullers' makes use of the rhythms of the seasons and of music to bring the reader right there. The coming-of-age of the adolescent made me sad and the realities of racism caused me to cringe in horror. The alienation is deeply frustrating. This is exemplified by one very moving scene where two men debate how to handle injustices. Both men want the same things, but yet they talk past each other, each demanding that the other must follow a certain prescribed ideology. Each character is restricted by limitations. Each one has desires. And each one has his or her desires crushed. How each one reacts and how this interaction affects everyone else is the essence of the story. The author's skill pulls it all together masterfully. It's a disturbing book as it tugs at that chord of isolation that exists in all of us. And yet, it is a wonderful read. I highly recommend it.

reread this as an adult

I am always amazed how books, such as The Heart is a Lonely Hunter, improve with age. I first read it in high school and was bored. Now I have reread this book as an adult. It touches my heart and soul.The Heart is a Lonely Hunter is so well titled. It encompasses lonely souls who cluster around John Singer, a deaf mute. Singer losses his deaf mute roommate and companion, Antonapolous, when he is committed to an asylum. He is now alone… isolated. This change operates as a catalyst for the rest of the story.Published in 1940 before the creation of political correctness, its characters explore fascism, communism, racism, and poverty. They are misfits, isolated even when together in the same room. After his friend is committed to the asylum, John Singer takes a room with the Kelly family. The various characters that populate the novel visit John Singer in his room. They talk to John Singer, who can understand them through lip reading. Each character finds in John Singer what he/she needs to find… a sympathetic heart. But none of the characters understands or knows John Singer. He has no one to talk to; no one who to understand him; no one to help fend off his own loneliness. For John Singer, there is no sympathetic heart. For vacation, he visits Antonapolous is the asylum, where his insane friend cannot care about him. Singer responds to Antonapolous in the same way as the visitors to his room respond to him. He talks to him using sign language, but Antonapolous does not talk to him. He finds in this friend his sympathetic heart. This relationship parallels to his own position with the characters who visit his room. The novel reaches its climax when Antonapolous dies, and Singer can no longer find a reason for living.This is a beautifully written book that takes the reader into the South in the 1930’s with a truth that is hard to find in most contemporary novels. I highly recommend The Heart is a Lonely Hunter.

Heartwrenching

I'm a teenager who read this book as part of an English assignment and about 15 minutes ago finished this book while strewn across the chair with tears streaming down my face.It is har to find books that truly reach inside you and shake you up, but when you do, it's like visiting with a long lost friend. The Heart is a Lonely Hunter is one of those books. It is about a small southern town and all the people that exist in it. Exist isn't quite the right word though, it is more like they are standing on the outside looking in. Each character- Mick, Jake Blount, the doctor, Mr. Brannon, are hopelessly lost and the truth is just out of their grasp. They each have a piece missing and seek to fill it with drinking, sex, music, or just hiding from their problems. I find it ironic that the only one they can tell their problems to is the deaf-mute, Mr. Singer, for he is the only one that listens.It was so real in some places that I was amazed that someone didn't read my mind, such as when Mick was talking about entering the "inside place" where music existed.This book and its story will surely stay in my mind and haunt me for a long while.

So much to say

A truly amazing book, an outstanding achievment. At times it was dificult to read, dipping as it does into feelings of profound sadness, grief, and loneliness. In some ways I can understand why we don't read it in high school-not many books, if any, illustrate the absurd, self-defeating egotism of human beings. There's so much going in this book it can dizzy you. Is the deaf-mute a Christ figure, full of compassion? Or is he essentially a simpleton, beloved because, like the family dog, he can't talk back. Singer the mute seems to be the hub the other stories revolve around, but Mick is also a central figure. (Representing the author perhaps?) Her brief liason with her Jewish neighbor is absolutely heart rending. They had so much to tell each other, such capacity to heal one another but instead he flees, from his own need, before Mick can sing "Will you still love me tommorrow?" And then there is the severe, dignified black doctor who wants to teach his people, lead them to a sophisticatation and nobility equaling, even surpasing, that of whites, only to be viciously beaten by cops outside of the courthouse when he tries to inquire about his jailed son. A beating which convinces those who he attempts to educate that shuffling and smiling is their destiny. "The Heart is a Lonely Hunter" is about the inadequacy of human communication. So many people, with such intense wants and needs who can only unburden themselves on a deaf-mute. A deaf-mute who likely is indifferent to their suffering. Is the human experience so lonely?
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