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Miss Lonelyhearts & The Day of the Locust
by Nathanael West
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According to the back cover: "Nathanael West died almost unknown in 1940" - fairly young in a car crash. "Miss Lonelyhearts" is about a newspaper columnist who gets emotionally sucked into the dilemmas of the people who write in to him. A novel of conscience, set in an often conscienceless profession. "The Day of the Locust" is a critique of Hollywood - later made into a Hollywood movie. I'm 'reviewing' his 4 novels here out of my usual alphabetical order that I...more
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Read in February, 2008
The New Directions edition of Lonelyhearts and Locust has gone through at least 35 printings. Remarkable, really, for a pair of short novels that now seem dated and that always seemed somewhat hysterical.
Lonelyhearts takes place in New York. The title character is a 20-something man who writes the advice column for a city newspaper. He is overwhelmed by the despair and desperation of the letters he receives, and seeks answers, or escape, in sex, drink, and religion. He i...more
Lonelyhearts takes place in New York. The title character is a 20-something man who writes the advice column for a city newspaper. He is overwhelmed by the despair and desperation of the letters he receives, and seeks answers, or escape, in sex, drink, and religion. He i...more
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Read in March, 2008
Easily two of the bleakest classic American novels I have ever read, nice & tidy in one short book.
"Miss Lonelyhearts" is the tale of a man who takes the job of advice columnist for a NY newspaper-- originally on a lark, but as he sees that his readers' problems are real and horrifying, he tries to find different ways to cope. Drink & sex abound. So do comparisons to Jesus. The book reads, at times, like a parable & a poem. Touching and horrifying.
"The Day ...more
"Miss Lonelyhearts" is the tale of a man who takes the job of advice columnist for a NY newspaper-- originally on a lark, but as he sees that his readers' problems are real and horrifying, he tries to find different ways to cope. Drink & sex abound. So do comparisons to Jesus. The book reads, at times, like a parable & a poem. Touching and horrifying.
"The Day ...more
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Read in August, 2007
recommends it for:
people who think that misery, while miserable, is also kinda funny
This two novella volume starts with <i>Miss Lonelyhearts<i>, and that's what I started with as well. Not really knowing anything about the novella going in, I was misled by the goofy title into thinking that I was in for a slightly wacky and fun time. This was not even remotely the case. Let me just say now that <i>Miss Lonelyhearts<i> is not for anyone who is even vaguely suicidal or depressed. There's a lot of seediness and squalor and West describes these situation...more
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I moved this book from "read" as I am currently rereading "Miss Lonelyhearts" for one of my grad classes (narrative efficiency); I did not ever really "get" this little piece of fiction previously, but time has made me a better reader for it (the five stars were for "Day of the Locust"). More on this...
Continued: When I was younger I read almost entirely for story and for character, as I think most readers do (which is not a judgment, merely an observa...more
Continued: When I was younger I read almost entirely for story and for character, as I think most readers do (which is not a judgment, merely an observa...more
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Read in January, 2008
Bicoastal Depression-era kiss-off: Lonelyhearts is about New York, journalism, the paralyzing cynicism of the overeducated; Locust is about L.A., entertainment, the wasteful mobilization of the naive. West writes in short chapters, with plain diction and little extraneous tissue in his prose, and a steady stream of strange and abrupt images or oberservations. The person I've read who writes most like him is Richard Brautigan -- in both cases you picture a lonely man, hunched over a keyboard. Tho...more
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Read in April, 2008
recommends it for:
you.
Well, I have to say that I am sorely disappointed that I have to part with these two novellas. I feel like I am going through a bad breakup. Fitting? Perhaps. I have a professor/novelist friend from Denmark who considers books like lovers. If you are reading a book the first question he will ask you is, "So...was it a good lover? did it make you breakfast in the morning and rub your back or did it leave a note and take your money out of your wallet?" West was good. real good. taught me...more
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Dear Miss Lonelyhearts -
I am in such pain I dont know what to do sometimes I think I will kill myself my kidneys hurt so much. My husband thinks no woman can be a good catholic and not have children irregardless of the pain. I was married honorable for our church but I never knew what married life meant as I never was told about man and wife. My grandmother never told me and she was the only mother I had but made a big mistake by not telling me as it dont pay to be inocent and is only a b...more
I am in such pain I dont know what to do sometimes I think I will kill myself my kidneys hurt so much. My husband thinks no woman can be a good catholic and not have children irregardless of the pain. I was married honorable for our church but I never knew what married life meant as I never was told about man and wife. My grandmother never told me and she was the only mother I had but made a big mistake by not telling me as it dont pay to be inocent and is only a b...more
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Do you know what's wrong with this New Direction edition of West's most famous two little novels? Nothing. It's a perfect book. And it's a work that never gets old. The ultimate Hollywood nove (Day of the...)l that is almost spiritual. West got it right away and very few could match his greatness or snickering. A snicker that becomes passionate.
Miss Lonelyhearts is awesome beyond one's favorite mustard. It's a nasty little book that still stings. Hail West!
Miss Lonelyhearts is awesome beyond one's favorite mustard. It's a nasty little book that still stings. Hail West!
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Read in March, 1997
I've read MISS LONELYHEARTS, but not DAY OF THE LOCUST. I read the former after seeing the movie starring Montgomery Clift. I have never seen the movie of DAY OF THE LOCUST, starring Donald Sutherland. I have also never seen the Donald Sutherland version of INVASION OF THE BODY SNATCHERS, but I have seen the original, and read the Jack Finney book, which originally was called THE BODY SNATCHERS but which has since been re-titled INVASION OF THE BODY SNATCHERS. (I saw a Donald Sutherland movie t...more
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Read in March, 2008
Miss Lonelyhearts is a weird novel. I have read weird stuff before, but this seemed different. The first 10 pages were hard for me to get through, but I was determined to finish it. No big deal since its only about 60 pages long.
Miss Lonelyhearts writes an advice column in the paper. He gets depressed, tries to find something to make him feel alive (sex, booze, nature, Christ). And then a "cripple" kills him.
Yeah that's about it. But there are some interesting descripti...more
Miss Lonelyhearts writes an advice column in the paper. He gets depressed, tries to find something to make him feel alive (sex, booze, nature, Christ). And then a "cripple" kills him.
Yeah that's about it. But there are some interesting descripti...more
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Read in May, 2003
recommends it for:
Fans of bleak fiction
I'll never understand why people love bleak fiction so much. Maybe they don't have enough problems in their lives, or maybe they have so many that they can only escape them by reading about characters who have it even worse. But here are two stories that aren't even about the worst fortunes in literature; they're simply morose throughout, so that there's little or no pleasure even in the bright spots. Maybe, as someone who was nearly strangled to death and had to teach himself to walk again, and...more
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Read in May, 2007
Of these two novellas, Miss Lonelyhearts was by far my favorite. "Miss Lonelyhearts" is actually a male employee of a New York newspaper who write the advice column much in the vein of Ann Landers. He initially treats his job as a huge joke, but day after day of letters dealing with horribly depressing issues, he kinda cracks and becomes extremely disillusioned with humanity. The bulk of the story is Miss Lonelyhearts trying to free himself from depression through art, alcohol, sex, an...more
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Read in June, 2008
recommended to Katharine by:
jillianrecommends it for: Jenn Q
These are a couple of dark books. The first story, Miss Lonelyhearts, was enjoyable because I love advice columnists. Plus, you have to agree that columnists like that read many many letters from regular people with regular problems. Thing is, their regular problems are so much worse than I think about. The problems are colorful and help me to realize that life in the 1930's was nowhere near bliss, what with the depression, but it certainly isn't the good old days. The Greatest Generation? ...more
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Read in June, 2008
10 pages into this, around the scene with Miss Lonelyhearts and the unfortunate lamb, I knew this would either be one of the best books I'd ever read or one of the most repulsive. Turns out, it was both.
This edition contains West's two most famous works, Miss Lonelyhearts, an extended short story about a man gradually disillusioned and destroyed by the moral weight of his job as an advice columnist to the perverse denizens of New York, and The Day of the Locust, a novella following the people...more
This edition contains West's two most famous works, Miss Lonelyhearts, an extended short story about a man gradually disillusioned and destroyed by the moral weight of his job as an advice columnist to the perverse denizens of New York, and The Day of the Locust, a novella following the people...more
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Read in October, 2007
recommends it for:
Dark Humor
I heard of this author and book through two different ways. I saw the move The Day of the Locusts (directed by John Schlesinger and you should see it)and Miss Lonleyhearts was referenced in the BBC show Father Baldi. The books are written in a very dark and very jaded tone. The difference is that Nathanael west analyzes and tries to understand the what and why of how things go bad, or at least perceived in a bad light. His two best tools are his dry wit and a ability for metaphor. He flows ...more
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I really enjoyed "The Day of the Locusts." Any book that features a drunk dwarf in the first ten pages is ok by me. His clean, realistic style, crossing into deep psychological insight, makes me wonder what else Mr. West would have written had he not bit the bullet so early.
"Miss Lonelyhearts" didn't do as much for me, I must admit. Maybe I should read it again. Anyway, add Mr. West to the list of "why isn't this guy more popular?" authors. Mr. West, meet M
"Miss Lonelyhearts" didn't do as much for me, I must admit. Maybe I should read it again. Anyway, add Mr. West to the list of "why isn't this guy more popular?" authors. Mr. West, meet M
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I actually liked MISS LONELYHEARTS more than DAY OF THE LOCUST, which surprised me since I'd never heard of it before. It's about a man who has a hack job at a newspaper dealing with desperate people all day. It drives him to a nervous breakdown. I could really relate to it.
DAY OF THE LOCUST is about a young man who moves to Los Angeles and...I hope that this time next year I won't be saying the same thing about DAY OF THE LOCUST. In spite of what some have said, I think that the movie v...more
DAY OF THE LOCUST is about a young man who moves to Los Angeles and...I hope that this time next year I won't be saying the same thing about DAY OF THE LOCUST. In spite of what some have said, I think that the movie v...more
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I first read this as a teenager and I'm not sure I was properly shocked. These two novels are from 1933. I found myself, in 2008, disturbed by their bitter sarcasm and anger; also the rape fantasies. I don't love West's fixation on religious metaphor, but there are lines which are brilliantly funny with a very modern sort of scathing irony. "The Day Of the Locust" is so brutal that no subsequent Hollywood parody has beat it. One of the main characters is named Homer Simpson.
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Read in March, 2008
Ann Patchett, one of my favorites, recommended this book, which is why I read it. It takes place in the early thirties, at the time of the Great Depression. The protagonist is a newspaper reporter writing an advice column. He becomes extremely depressed trying to respond to the dreadful things around him, looking to religion, sex, and alcohol. The writing is dry and satirical, Nathanael West popular. The humor dates itself and at times I don't think I understood the irony.
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