Heart Is A Lonely Hunter

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Unabridged
Author: Carson McCullers
Narrator: Cherry Jones
Genres: Fiction, Literature, Classics
Publisher: HarperCollins Publishers
Date: July 2004
Length: 13 hours, 30 minutes
Ratings:
Formats:
  • CD
  • WMA

Overview

When she was only twenty-three, Carson McCullers's first novel created a literary sensation. She was very special, one of America's superlative writers who conjures up a vision of existence as terrible as it is real, who takes us on shattering voyages into the depths of the spiritual isolation that underlies the human condition. This novel is the work of a supreme artist, Carson McCullers's enduring masterpiece. The heroine is the strange young girl, Mick Kelly. The setting is a small Southern town, the cosmos universal and eternal. The characters are the damned, the voiceless, the rejected. Some fight their loneliness with violence and depravity, Some with sex or drink, and some -- like Mick -- with a quiet, intensely personal search for beauty.

Reviews (20)

Old but Compelling

Written by Judy S from Sacramento, CA on September 27th, 2008

  • Book Rating: 4/5

I forget how I chose this particular book, which is rather old, but I truly enjoyed it. The characters are well drawn and the narrator did a good job of invoking each of them. In fact, I rented the old movie of this story but couldn't even finish it. The characters in my mind, put there via this story, were far more interesting than the ones the movie portrayed. This book took me to that era and the realism of racism in the characters' lives. The intertwined group of "oddballs" depicted here - the deaf mute, a young girl, the black doctor, the mentally ill/alcoholic, and the reticent bar owner - were truly well drawn and shared a sense of their outsider status.

not my kind of read

Written by Anonymous on September 8th, 2008

  • Book Rating: 2/5

I failed this book. The book did not fail me. The writing was on the mark. I enjoyed the phrasing and the well developed characters. Also, the narration was one of the best. In fact, the narration kept me hooked. But after a time, the depressing book became just so overly full of doom and gloom that I stopped. Even if this book is a classic, I just could not take it anymore. This book was just not what I enjoy in a read. I found myself continuing to listen simply because the book was a classic-there was no "what is going to happen next". Finally, I threw in the towe-did not finish it.

Heart is a Lonely Hunter

Written by Diana on August 24th, 2008

  • Book Rating: 0/5

The author uses the spaghetti method of writing. Three disjointed threads you need to get interested in. Then a fourth. And they don't come together until near the end and you don't much understand WHY they're there until then. W-A-A-AY too long and rambling. Author could have said what he did in a much shorter book. Author ties up all loose ends at the end of the book. The narrater does many voices, but Harper-Collins doesn't do audiobooks that well. Recommended read after A Tree Grows in Brooklyn. A Tree is on my A+ list, The Heart is not.

Heart is a Lonely Hunter

Written by Diana on August 24th, 2008

  • Book Rating: 0/5

The author uses the spaghetti method of writing. Three disjointed threads you need to get interested in. Then a fourth. And they don't come together until near the end and you don't much understand WHY they're there until then. W-A-A-AY too long and rambling. Author could have said what he did in a much shorter book. Author ties up all loose ends at the end of the book. The narrater does many voices, but Harper-Collins doesn't do audiobooks that well. Recommended read after A Tree Grows in Brooklyn. A Tree is on my A+ list, The Heart is not.

Heart Is A Lonely Hunter

Written by Elsie from Hurricane, WV on August 14th, 2008

  • Book Rating: 5/5

Cherry Jones does an incredible job reading this profoundly deep book. Great development of characters who are mistreated and misunderstood in a 1930s timeframe. I am amazed Carson McCuller had such insight at the tender age of 23.

The Heart is a Lonely Hunter

Written by Mariah Burton Nelson on January 27th, 2008

  • Book Rating: 5/5

Due in part to the FABULOUS interpretation by reader Cherry Jones, this book has become one of my all-time favorites. I was TOTALLY absorbed in the story and the characters, and a week later they live on in my mind and heart. If you have not read this before, or even if you have, but have not heard this reader read it, listen to this tape. Fascinating, poignant story, beautifully told.

A Great Read

Written by Laura from Milwaukee, WI on December 14th, 2007

  • Book Rating: 4/5

It was a slow start, but well worth the wait. Very rich characters. The narrator is excellent. The only problem is that I REALLY want to know what happens to Mick in the future!

The Heart Is A Lonely Hunter

Written by Angela Jones on October 26th, 2006

  • Book Rating: 5/5

Awesome! A heart wrencing thought provoking novel. I loved the narrator, she was spectacular giving every character their own voice. I felt like I had been transferred back in history. Even thru all the violence and turmoil of the time this novel was writen you could hear the heart and goodness in every perosn.

Yuck!

Written by Anonymous on March 29th, 2006

  • Book Rating: 1/5

I stopped at Disk 5...and I still have no idea what this book is even about. I stayed with it that long thinking that it had to get better, but it did not.

Slow starter but wonderful

Written by Christina Espinoza on March 12th, 2006

  • Book Rating: 4/5

This story is so real and tragic. I loved it but it took a while. Just like in real life I liked some of the characters and disliked others.

Author Details

Author Details

McCullers, Carson

Lula Carson Smith (Carson McCullers) was born in Columbus, Georgia, the daughter of a well-to-do watchmaker and jeweler of French Huguenot extraction. From the age of five McCullers took piano lessons and at the age of 17 she moved to New York to study piano at Juilliard School of Music. However, she never attended the school - she managed to lose the money set aside for her tuition. McCullers worked in menial and studied creative writing at Columbia and New York universities. In 1936 she published in Story magazine an autobiographical piece, 'Wunderkind', which depicted a musical prodigy's failure and adolescent insecurity.

In 1937 she married Reeves McCullers, a failed author. Before the wedding she him told her parents that she did not want to marry him until she first had experienced sex with him. "The sexual experience was not like D.H. Lawrence," she later said. "No grand explosions or colored lights, but it gave me a chance to know Reeves better, and really learn to love him." They moved to North Caroline, living there for two years. During this time she wrote The Heart is a Lonely Hunter, a novel in the Southern Gothic tradition. The title, suggested by McCullers's editor, was taken from Fiona MacLeod's poem 'The Lonely Hunter'. Set in the 1930s in a small mill town, similar to Charlotte of the 1930s, the story tells about an adolescent girl with a passion to study music. Other major characters include an unsuccessful socialist agitator, a black physician struggling to maintain his personal dignity, a widower who owns a café, and John Singer, the deaf-mute protagonist, who is confidante of people who talk to him about loneliness and misery. When Singer's Greek mute friend goes insane, Singer is left alone. He takes a room with the Kelly family, where he is visited by the town's misfits. After discovering that his mute friend has died, Singer shoots himself - there is no one left to communicate with him.

The Heart is a Lonely Hunter was interpreted as an anti-fascist book when it came out. In 1968 it was filmed with Alan Arkin in the lead role. Reflections in a Golden Eye was directed by John Huston (1967), starring Marlon Brando and Elizabeth Taylor. Some of the film was shot in New York City and on Long Island, where Huston was permitted to use an abandoned Army installation. Many of the interiors and some of the exteriors were done in Italy. "I first met Carson McCullers during the war when I was visiting Paulette Goddard and Burgess Meredith in upstate New York," said Huston in An Open Book (1980). "Carson lived nearby, and one day when Buzz and I were out for a walk she hailed us from her doorway. She was then in her early twenties, and had already suffered the first of series of strokes that made her an invalid before she was thirty. I remember her as a fragile thing with great shining eyes, and a tremor in her hand as she placed it in mine. It wasn't palsy, rather a quiver of animal timidity. But there was nothing timid or frail about the manner in which Carson McCullers faced life. And as her affections multiplied, she only grew stronger."

McCullers's marriage turned out to be unlucky. Both she and her husband had homosexual relationships. They separated in 1940. McCullers moved to New York to live with George Davis, the editor of Harper's Bazaar. In Brooklyn McCullers became a member of the art commune February House. Among their friends were W.H. Auden, Paul and Jane Bowles, and the striptease artiste Gipsy Rose Lee. After World War II McCullers lived mostly in Paris. Her close friends during these years included Truman Capote and Tennessee Williams.

In 1945 McCullers remarried with Reeves. Three years later McCullers became so depressed she attempted suicide. Reeves killed himself in a Paris hotel in 1953 with an overdose of sleeping pills. McCullers's bitter-sweet play THE SQUARE ROOT OF WONDERFUL (1958) was an attempt to examine these traumatic experiences. THE MEMBER OF THE WEDDING (1946) described the feelings of a young girl at her brother's wedding. The Broadway production of the novella had a successful run in 1950-51. McCullers's best short stories include 'Madame Zilensky and the King of Finland', collected in THE BALLAD OF THE SAD CAFE (1951). The title story, a novella, tells of a strong woman, Miss Amelia Evans, who falls in love with a hunchback, Cousin Lymon. At the end he destroys Miss Amelia's cafe with his lover, her former husband.

Carson McCullers suffered throughout her life from several illnesses - she had contracted rheumatic fever at the age of fifteen and a series of strokes left her a virtual invalid in her early 30's. She died in New York on September 29, 1967, after a stroke and a resultant brain haemorrhage. McCullers's final novel was CLOCK WITHOUT HANDS (1961), which was a bestseller, but received mixed review. SWEET AS A PICKLE, CLEAN AS A PIG (1964) was a collection of children's verse. Her unfinished autobiography, ILLUMINATION AND NIGHT GLARE (1999), McCullers dictated during her final months.

Although McCullers's oeuvre is often described as "Southern Gothic," she produced her famous works after leaving the South. Her eccentric characters suffer from loneliness that is interpreted with deep empathy. In a discussion with the Irish critic and writer Terence De Vere White she confessed: "Writing, for me, is a search for God." This search was not acknowledged by all of her colleagues - Arthur Miller dismissed her a "minor author", but Gore Vidal praised her work as ''one of the few satisfying achievements of our second-rate culture.''