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The Hours: A Novel

The Hours: A Novel

List Price: $13.00
Your Price: $9.75
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 2 stars
Summary: an interesting phenomenon
Review: I read in the NY Times that the author proposed a boxed set, his book and "Mrs. Dalloway." I think this is a bad idea, for the following reason. I, who had never been able to stomach Virginia Woolf as a young man, read "Mrs. Dalloway" first. I found it profound, amusing, wonderful, and I revised my opinion of Woolf utterly. Turning to "The Hours," I felt it was an interesting failure, drowned, as it were, in the light shimmering in my mind from Mrs. Woolf's incandescent prose. I imagine the Pulizer committee made up of English professors who, having failed to persuade students to appreciate Woolf, were overcome by the happy memories of their long ago love affair with "Mrs. Dalloway." In the end I found the two books about as successful as the parties each bring us to. Then again, my profound thanks to Mr. Cunningham for sending me to Ms. Woolf.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A Great Book
Review: For me, this was the best book of the year. Cunningham has a great sense of perception and language and uses those traits to full power in the telling of these three women. This is w beautifully written and compulsively readable story that is worthy of the Pulitzer and everything else it either did or should have won.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Presumptuous but it works
Review: I found the idea of an American male attempting to write a companion novel to Mrs. Dalloway, in the style of Virginia Woolf, quite presumptuous. Needless to say I was extremely sceptical. After reading The Hours, I must say it was beautifully executed. Although this is not a sequel of a classic and does stand alone, anyone wanting to read this should read Mrs. Dalloway first to appreciate all the nuances and subtle referrences. Any fan of Mrs. Dalloway (my favorite Woolf novel) should read this... you surely won't regret it.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Count me as one who loved it!
Review: Wow. The readers really seem to have extreme reactions to this series of novellas. I thought it was extremely well done. In particular, I appreciated the originality of the work. I also really enjoy the novella format. For readers who like this form, I would highly recommend both The Love of a Good Woman by Alice Munro and Fried Calamari by D.M. Roman.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: My favorite book in recent memory
Review: The Hours deserves every award it has won. Cunningham has created a brilliant, deeply affecting book, which is particularly amazing because it is so spare and lean. It moved me like no other novel I've read in a very long time. Thinking about the ending still gives me the chills months after I finished it.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Elegant and mesmerizing
Review: This novel is both an homage to Mrs. Dalloway and a quantum leap beyond it. It's blinding in its spare, elegant prose and in its Polaroid snaps of a day in the lives of its fascinating characters.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Strengths and weaknesses both
Review: Is this the first 3-star review? All the others represent extremes of repulsion or devotion--perhaps a good sign for a book. After all, it draws a reaction. To measure Cunningham's prose against Woolf is perhaps unfair--but, he sets up the comparison himself. He's a good writer, perhaps a bit precious and too self-conscious about writing a good line--and all in all he did a pretty great job of pulling together three separate narratives about characters that range from boring to merely dull to fascinating (Woolf). The story line about the California wife I found excruciating until she decides to check into a hotel. At that point I thought "great. She's going to kill herself and we can get on with the good stuff."

A lurid question: Did Woolf really only use one stone to drown herself? I thought there were several....

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Such extremes of opinion
Review: Although I side completely with those other flying five-star reviews, I could not help but notice what extremes the we go to in our opinion of this novel. The worst, the best, and almost nothing in between. It is on that observation alone that I argue how original the novel is. No one liked it - they either hated or loved it. By the way, I loved it. But importantly, I, like the rest of you, felt something.

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: One mere line cannot adequately describe it's awfulness.
Review: Overweening in it's pretense and preciousness. I suspect Hollywood will be hot on it's heels. Read Woolf, not Cunningham. Absolutely phoney.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: This is a truly brilliant novel; a tapestry of events.
Review: Cunningham's novel uses Virginia Woolf as an author as well as a character. His interweaving of the characters of Mrs Dalloway, Clarissa and Woolf is both lyric and literary. The three stories are compelling and beautifully written.


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