Rating:  Summary: Really good but a little too heavy on description Review: This is one of those cases where, had I read the book first, I probably would have been in awe of the richness and touching insights in this story. I saw the movie first and loved it so much that I had to read the book that started it all and I was probably wanting the story to move at a different, more visual pace. The story is amazing and this writer definately has an incredibly original mind. My only complaint is that it dwells a lot on lingering descriptions while I am just dying for the story to move on. Once it does, it's heavenly. The flow of the story is just sometimes stalled with details. For instance, in one scene, an assistant brings in a cup of coffee and we have to hear about her story and what she appears to be but what she really is and I just want to hear the conversation of the main characters that is going to take place. Still, of course, it is a wonderful book and will leave you touched.
Rating:  Summary: stunning Review: i can't remember the last time a book tore into me so deeply (and i read A LOT). michael cunningham constructed a book of such intricate beauty, and intimate, significant musings - that it's difficult to even know where to begin.you can read the editorial reviews to piece out a synopsis of the plot - yet the plot almost feels insignificant in comparison to the sweep of emotion the novel left me with. the clever way he weaves the stories of the three women together (virginia woolf, mrs. brown, and clarissa) is fascinating, but "clever" is hardly the word i would use to classify this book in any way. i was simply struck by the interior monologues of the women in the book... their thoughts on life and death have a touching truth to them - i felt as though michael cunningham had drilled a whole into the inner depths of my psyche, and found the words to describe what i've been thinking all along- thinking, but lacking the patience and the drive to map it out so clearly. i have yet to see the movie, but the previews send shivers down my spine. it will be incredibly interesting to see how a novel immersed im the interior makes its' exterior transformation onto the big screen. aside from my personal musings on how the book spoke to me, etc, it's well worth the read- it's a beautiful book filled with passages worth committing to memory, and although it is experimental in its' own way, it isn't pretentious or difficult to read. i rarely close the pages of a book feeling as though i have somehow changed, but in this case i did.
Rating:  Summary: Exhilarating Review: This is truly a fine work by this author. 'There's just this for consolation: an hour here or there when our lives seem, against all odds and expectations, to burst open and give us everything we've ever imagined.... Still, we cherish the city, the morning; we hope, more than anything, for more.' We can't ask for any more from this author. This book was written exceptionally well for its time and relevance to our society. There are none like it in the world. Dreams gateway to the self is also another book that has given me a newfound respect for life. Check them both out at Amazon.com.
Rating:  Summary: Depressing story Review: I read this book, based on its Pulitzer prize status and it being a feminist story, however, I was disappointed. It was very well written and had a few lovely and poetic parts, but mostly it was full of unhappy, depressed, hopeless gay people who I could not sympathize with in any way. They were either unable to accept and live with being gay or couldn't figure out how to get help or antidepressant meds. I couldn't understand what was the point of all the angst and misery. The theme seemed to be "life is hopeless and terrible, and if you are lucky, you may get a few good hours in a lifetime". Very big downer. I won't see the movie.
Rating:  Summary: A day in the life.... Review: Michael Cunningham has captured the spirit of three very different women. Even though we only get a glimpse of one day out of a lifetime, Cunningham is able to show the strentgh and integrity that each character shows in times of crisis, loss, or sadness. The three women are Virginia Woolf, Laura Brown, and Clarissa Vaughn. Virginia has to deal with a life full of dead pan headahces and voices that won't leave her in peace. She has a semi droll existence in a suburb od England and she dreams of going back to the city. She wants to explore. Virginia is in the process of writing her masterpiece, Mrs. Dalloway, on this day of days. She has a visit from her sister in which a death is experienced. Virginia wishes she could lay in the place of the bird her niece and nephews have created a funeral pyre for. Laura Brown is a Los Angeles housewife in the 1950's. She is pregnant with her second child, and it is her husbands birthday. The husband that she married not because she "loved" him, but because he was a good man and he was strong. Laura uses books to escape from her unhappiness. The frivolity of life sends her to a motel to get away from the child that always seems aware of her and the cake with the crumbs in the icing. Her current escape is Mrs. Dalloway by Virginia Woolf, which she reads in the hotel room that would be a perfect place to die alone. The third woman is Clarissa Vaughan. Clarissa is planning a party in honor of a friend dying of AIDS who has won a literary award for his astonishing poerty. Clarissa is what one would call a modern day Mrs. Dalloway, they even share the same first name. She spends the day flitting around trying to make things perfect for her party, including moving a flower vase 5 times. The hours is a look at how droll life can be if you allow it to be. Each woman will inspire as well depress the soul, and make you question what is important in life.
Rating:  Summary: blown to bits Review: how amazing is this book. i'm so glad i was never tempted to read the last chapter before it was due...and what an ending the book has!!! the book definitely deserved the Pulitzer. I am vowing NOT to see the film - i know it will only destroy the sheer beauty of this work. that's how good this book is.
Rating:  Summary: Haunting little treasure Review: This wonderful book, almost a novella, will haunt you long after you've finished the last page. In fact, you may want to reread it. Surprisingly, the current movie version is an excellent adaptation of this insightful and thought provoking work. However, if you can possibly avoid seeing the film until you've read the book on which it is based, do so! Without preaching, the author manages to make exquisit commentary on the complexities and many aspects of Happiness. You should come away from the experience enthralled.
Rating:  Summary: What was the point of that? Review: Yes Michael Cunningham is a wonderful writer of prose, but it is inserted in unrealistic streams of consciousness revelations during his characters' mundane activities. The lack of action in this book causes the focus to be on the characters who are revealed as self-absorbed, narcissistic and somewhat delusional while consistently whiny. It is not hard to discern why this book, as insignificant as it is, has been lauded by the press and Hollywood. It caters to sympathies that the press and Hollywood universally suscribe to without a search for greater truths or real meaning. Additionally, the writer creates no sense of urgency or intrigue for the reader. It is the equivalent of watching a soap opera in which the writers are trying their best to write like Shakespeare.
Rating:  Summary: A good book...once you get into it Review: At first, I found the book extremely boring. I almost put it down. Luckily I didn't. It is a wonderful piece of literature. Mr Cunningham did a wonderful job of creating rich characters that you want to care about. I bought three books worth mentioning This one. CHILD ABDUCTION: How to protect your children, and Self- Matters. All worth it.
Rating:  Summary: Beautiful, haunting, memorable Review: Cunningham not only brings Virginia Woolf to life in his novel "The Hours," but he also brings her novel "Mrs. Dalloway" to life as well. The book is a joy to read: *it's unutterably clever in the way it unobtrusively echoes the plot and characters of "Mrs. Dalloway," serving as a tribute to that novel and recalling its very themes *it's gorgeously written in long, rhythmic, sumptuous sentences that echo Woolf's own style *it's brilliantly constructed as it moves back and forth among its three story lines, and I truly can't remember a more satisfying conclusion to a novel in years *it will move you and it will stay with you once you've finished reading it And now a confession: when I read "Mrs. Dalloway" as an immature college student many years ago, I failed to appreciate it. In fact, I put off reading "The Hours" for some time because of my college reading experience. I'm certainly glad I've grown up enough to have opened the covers of this lovely, lovely book.
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