The Heart Is a Lonely Hunter by Carson McCullers

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(Paperback - Oprah Book Club Edition)

Average Customer Rating: Customer Rating for this product is 4 out of 5 (54 ratings)

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Synopsis

Published in 1940, The Heart Is a Lonely Hunter is considered McCullers' finest work. The focus of the work is on John Singer, a deaf-mute in a Georgia mill town during the 1930s, and on his effect on the people who confide in him. When Singer's mute Greek companion of 10 years goes insane, Singer is left alone and isolated. He takes a room with the Kelly family, where he is visited by the town's misfits, who turn to him for understanding but have no knowledge of his inner life. The book's emphasis on individuals who are considered outcasts because of race, politics, disability, or sensibility placed it squarely within the Southern gothic tradition of American literature.

The New York Times

A remarkable book . . . [McCullers] writes with a sweep and certainty that are overwhelming.

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Biography

The Heart is a Lonely Hunter introduced Carson McCullers as both a major literary talent and as a bestselling author. A troubled soul who could translate heartbreak and despair into beautiful prose, McCullers’s novels and stories established her as one of the great writers of the American South.

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Customer Reviews

Number of Reviews: 54
Average Rating: Customer Rating for this product is 4 out of 5
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Customer Rating for this product is 5 out of 5 A Very Good Read
The kid next door, A vid reader, 02/22/2008

Got this book as a gift from a used book store. I would not have chose it as a read of choice. Now I am glad I did. Sad, but well written. I would recommend this book.

Also recommended: KS.Michaels Love Returns Through The Portal Of Time. Tom Clancy, Sidney Sheldon, Peter Benchly

Customer Rating for this product is 4 out of 5 Nothing happens....and Everything Happens
A reviewer, A reviewer, 01/28/2008

I usually fly through most reads, but this is one novel that took me some time to get through. It was a book that I could easily put down, and yet felt compelled over and over again to pick up again the next day. It seemed little really happened in the book--and yet, EVERYTHING happened. It's difficult to explain. What did I take away from it? We are all looking for that one person, one connection that completely understands us. We yearn for that someone who can see into our souls and understand all those things we can't always even put into words. Four of the main characters each thought they found that person in Mr. Singer. And Mr. Singer thought he found that in his friend, the Greek. And yet they all deluded themselves. No matter how much we reach out to others, the human condition is at its deepest level, a lonely one. Most importantly, I can only touch the surface of what I took away from this story. Much like Mick, who would pound her fists in frustration at what she felt in her heart but could never express, this is a book that calls for understanding on a very different level.

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