The Hours is both an homage to Virginia Woolf and very much its own creature. Even as Michael Cunningham brings his literary idol back to life, he intertwines her story with those of two more contemporary women. One gray suburban London morning in 1923, Woolf awakens from a dream that will soon lead to
Mrs. Dalloway. In the present, on a beautiful June day in Greenwich Village, 52-year-old Clarissa Vaughan is planning a party for her oldest love, a poet dying of AIDS. And in Los Angeles in 1949, Laura Brown, pregnant and unsettled, does her best to prepare for her husband's birthday, but can't seem to stop reading Woolf. These women's lives are linked both by the 1925 novel and by the few precious moments of possibility each keeps returning to. Clarissa is to eventually realize:
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.
As Cunningham moves between the three women, his transitions are seamless. One early chapter ends with Woolf picking up her pen and composing her first sentence, "Mrs. Dalloway said she would buy the flowers herself." The next begins with Laura rejoicing over that line and the fictional universe she is about to enter. Clarissa's day, on the other hand, is a mirror of Mrs. Dalloway's--with, however, an appropriate degree of modern beveling as Cunningham updates and elaborates his source of inspiration. Clarissa knows that her desire to give her friend the perfect party may seem trivial to many. Yet it seems better to her than shutting down in the face of disaster and despair. Like its literary inspiration,
The Hours is a hymn to consciousness and the beauties and losses it perceives. It is also a reminder that, as Cunningham again and again makes us realize, art belongs to far more than just "the world of objects."
--Kerry Fried
--This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.
As evidenced by the change in cover design that now features three superstar actresses, Meryl Streep, Julianne Moore, and Nicole Kidman, the release of director Stephen Daldrys highly lauded 2002 film adaptation of Michael Cunninghams The Hours has promoted a resurgence of interest in the 1998 Pulitzer-prize winning novel. Unlike so many adaptations of book to film, the two forms of this novel are, in fact, highly complementary in their sensitive and beautifully-wrought treatment of the dark terrains of madness, depression, and homoeroticism that inform the pervading theme of love. So, if youve seen the film, do not hesitate to read the book (or vice versa)- you only stand to enrich your understanding and admiration of both the story and the authors artistry in telling it.
Cunninghams imaginatively interwoven three-level plot, founded on Virginia Woolfs masterpiece Mrs. Dalloway, resonates with the complex sensibilities of Woolf herself-her homoerotic desire, her depression, her madness and her genius. Taking a daring plunge below the surface of things in much the same way that Woolfs character, in the opening scene, enters the water with rocks in the pockets of her coat, the novel explores the burden of suppressed desire, the difficulty of living a split life. As Adrienne Rich states in Lies, Secrets, and Silence, this is an extremely painful and dangerous way to live; that is, to be split between a publicly acceptable persona, and a part of yourself that you perceive as the essential, the creative and powerful self, yet also as possibly unacceptable, perhaps even monstrous. The consequences of this split, moreover, often result in madness, depression, and loneliness, the psychological conditions that plague the characters in the novel. But in the end, Cunningham draws not only a compassionate picture of the vicissitudes of all kinds of love and passion but also offers a triumphant resolution that embraces and enlarges its expression.
Transitions between the three subplots are artfully rendered by the oblique but insistent connections between stories-different scenes, different characters, but the problems and solutions of each move in an ongoing spiral of variations on shared themes. The book opens with Virginia Woolf writing the first sentence of Mrs. Dalloway, then shifts to the character of housewife Laura Brown reading the first page of the novel in Los Angeles in 1949, and finally moves to our present and that of Clarissa Vaughn, nicknamed Mrs. Dalloway by her gay friend Richard, a writer who is dying of AIDS. Clarissa, like Woolfs character Mrs. Dalloway, is planning a celebratory dinner party for her complicated and emotionally tormented friend-vexations that drive him equally to moments of passionate love and rage. Cunninghams plots intersect in subtle and intricate ways, echoing Woolfs own artistic methodology as stated in the novels epigraph: I dig out beautiful caves behind my characters; the caves shall connect, & each comes to daylight at the present moment. And in the end, those caves behind the characters do connect-in ways, moreover, that are startling and revelatory.
Love in this novel is a weighty consideration, as it is always placed contiguously with death, a position that lends itself to the more philosophical considerations of a chthonic love, a soul love, one that embraces all of the subterranean complexities and expressions of that most enigmatic of human emotions. Clarissas inner struggle with her feelings for Richard, and all that she rejected over thirty years ago, is representative of the struggle with our own illusions that conflict with the more sensible considerations of living with ground beneath our feet. So Clarissa sensibly opts to accept the beauty of the ordinariness of life, of her life with lover, Sally, and not to imagine that other future, that rejected future
as a vast and endearing romance laid over friendship so searing and profound it could accompany them to the grave and possibly beyond. She could, she thinks, have entered another world. She could have had a life as potent and dangerous as literature itself. Now, facing the stark reality of Richards spiritual death as he nears the end of his physical life-he smells, hes cynical, unhappy, unfulfilled, and professing his love for her even though hes gay, shes lesbian-Clarissa knows that her decision was right, that it would have been impossible to live with Richards passion nor could it have been sustained from day to day. It is, in fact, clear that loving Richard can only be, as it was for others who tried, a long doomed project and so she was wise to abandon it in favor of simpler pleasures. Although she attempts to convince him of the value of whats left of his life, he cannot endure it, saying: but there are still the hours, arent there? One and then another. For Richard, there is simply too much time to live with the burden of his pain, his regrets, and his disease, so he chooses, like Virginia Woolf, to end his life.
Meanwhile, Laura Brown contemplates suicide because shes unfulfilled as a 50s wife and mother. Her own suppressed desire leads her toward thoughts of Virginia Woolf as virginal, unbalanced, defeated by the impossible demands of life and art, and she is glad to know that it is possible to stop living. There is comfort in facing the full range of options; in considering all your choices, fearlessly and without guile. But the startling ending of Lauras story will peel the scales from readers eyes when they find out what options she takes.
The three stories are connected by the image of a single kiss, its power to open up a vision of the future and fill it with hope. Cunningham brilliantly defines it through Clarissas words, as ones greatest point of optimism converging in one kiss an intense yearning for all that is possible in love. When Virginia kisses Vanessa, she describes it as full of a love complex and ravenous, ancient, as the kiss that would sustain her. Clarissa remembers Richards kiss as singular perfection, in part because it seemed, so clearly to promise more. Now she knows: That was the moment, right then. There has been no other. And when Laura kisses her friend Kitty, she knows she can continue to remember the moment, that even when loving her husband, she can still dream of kissing Kitty again someday, in a kitchen or at the beach as children shriek in the surf, aroused, hopeless, in love with their own recklessness if not with each other.
So, in the end, Clarissas party for Richard goes on-but with a much wider sense of celebration: the affirmation of the meaning and beauty of life itself. She articulates her coming to terms with the new purpose of the party: It is in fact, a party, after all. It is a party for the not-yet-dead; for the relatively undamaged; for those who for mysterious reasons have the fortune to be alive. The deeply wise humanity of Cunninghams writing is humbling as he gently breaks our illusions of the ideals of romantic love and guides us back to living and loving in the now, in the ordinary, described in this exhilaratingly beautiful, optimistic passage:
We live our lives, do whatever we do, and then we sleep-its as simple and ordinary as that
.Theres 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 weve ever imagined, though everyone but children (and perhaps even they) knows these hours will inevitably be followed by others, far darker and more difficult. Still, we cherish the city in the morning; we hope, more than anything, for more.
Cindy MacKenzie (Books in Canada)
--This text refers to an alternate
Paperback
edition.