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The Hotel New Hampshire [Audio Cassette]

John Irving
4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (18 customer reviews)

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Product details

  • Audio Cassette
  • Publisher: Books on Tape (Jan 1985)
  • ISBN-10: 5557084088
  • ISBN-13: 978-5557084086
  • Average Customer Review: 4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (18 customer reviews)

More About the Author

John Irving
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Product Description

Book Description

A masterpiece from one of the great contemporary American writers. --This text refers to the Paperback edition.

Product Description

“The first of my father’s illusions was that bears could survive the life lived by human beings, and the second was that human beings could survive a life led in hotels.” So says John Berry, son of a hapless dreamer, brother to a cadre of eccentric siblings, and chronicler of the lives lived, the loves experienced, the deaths met, and the myriad strange and wonderful times encountered by the family Berry. Hoteliers, pet-bear owners, friends of Freud (the animal trainer and vaudevillian, that is), and playthings of mad fate, they “dream on” in a funny, sad, outrageous, and moving novel by the remarkable author of A Prayer for Owen Meany and Last Night in Twisted River.

--This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

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Customer Reviews

Most Helpful Customer Reviews
20 of 20 people found the following review helpful
Format:Paperback
I seriously don't think that John Irving is capable of telling a bad story. There are storytellers and then there are "storytellers." Irving is in that elevated category making each reading experience a memorable one. Right off the bat, you feel familiar with Irving's trademark themes. No story is complete without either a visit from a bear, a trip to Vienna or a romp with a prostitute. All these things might sound weird but Irving makes them seem so conventional.

Irving takes dysfunction and makes it seem normal. He talks about prostitutes yet it doesn't sound seedy. He gives life to a bear and makes the reader wish that perhaps they could have a bear for a pet. He just makes "pure idiocy sound logical."

The Hotel New Hampshire is the story of the Berry family living different stages of their lives at different hotels they manage to own. The love of hotel life first manifests itself when Win Berry meets Mary Bates at the Arbuthnot-by-the-Sea in Maine during a summer job in 1939. A series of events will find the Berrys opening up their first hotel in New Hampshire where they will attempt to raise their family which includes five children, a dog named Sorrow and a bear named Earl.

This is a family led by Win Berry, a true dreamer. As Irving, or should I say Freud, says, "A dream is a disguised fulfillment of a suppressed wish." In all, the family will fulfill the father's dream by establishing three separate Hotel New Hampshires with the one in Vienna being perhaps the turning point in all their lives.

This is an amazing look at an eccentric family made considerably more normal by Irving's words. They will experience life at its fullest while sharing their own measure of sadness as different family members pass on. Irving chooses to pass over these events more swiftly preferring to focus more on the life of the characters as opposed to the deaths because that's what Irving does...he writes about living life -- not about dying death.

When I think back over the years on some of the "characters" that I've read about and remembered like they were friends, it's Irving's characters who always seem to be at the top of the list...T.S. Garp, Owen Meany, Homer. This is the sign of a truly good book -- a book where the characters will last a lifetime in my fictional world. I have now added the entire Berry family to this list proving, once again, that Irving is a great "creator" of everlasting characters.

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8 of 8 people found the following review helpful
By unlikely_heroine VINE™ VOICE
Format:Paperback
"The Hotel New Hampshire", a novel ostensibly about a New England family who eventually relocate to Vienna, is really an extended experiment of ideas and subjects for Irving and despite the glowing reviews from others, it's not a book which really worked for me personally. Irving throws incest, homosexuality, suicide, disability, philosophy, sexual abuse etc into the mix but neither the plot nor the characters are compelling enough for it really all to hang together.

This is the story of the Berry family, relatively unsuccessful hoteliers who are less living, breathing characters who might just be related to each other, than a motley crew of individuals for Irving to hang all those ideas on and throw things at. A number of reviewers of the book note the merciless way in which youngest child Egg and the mother of the family are dispatched in a plane crash with little ceremony or resulting grief - for me, the starkest example of the book's failure to engage on any emotional level - but the truth is that all of these people could have gone down in flames and I wouldn't have much cared. Irving doesn't bother to develop his characters, and is content to gloss over the fallout from, say, that plane crash, or the gang rape one character suffers, in favour of upping the quirkiness quotient or moving on to the next "controversial" topic on his list.

Ultimately, the book can be enjoyed for the sheer audacity of Irving in his choice of subject matter, and I am giving "The Hotel New Hampshire" three stars because of what this writer tries to cover here and the verve with which he attempts the whole thing. The problem is that having introduced all of his various ideas, Irving doesn't seem to have very much of meaning to say about them, and nothing really rings true from the first page to the last.

As a side note, I can't be the only person to find the depiction of the romantic and sexual exploits of, er, John (interesting choice of name from this author...), this novel's hero, totally unconvincing, not to mention being laden with just that little bit of wish fulfilment. Two key romances in particular are plot points in the novel so I will gloss over most of the details but suffice to say that none of John's relationships with women are the least bit convincing and they all feel like very self-indulgent writing. In particular, the idea that romance or sex with John helps two women (who used to be in a relationship with each other) "get over" very particular issues they had did for me, nearly border on offensive. The love stories (such as they are) in this novel are by far its weakest aspect.
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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful
Format:Paperback
For me, John Irving is a bit of a guilty pleasure. There's a lot of things wrong with his books, many of them being mentioned by a previous reviewer. He doesn't always give his characters a rounded personality (particularly in the case of the narrator, probably something borrowed from The Great Gatsby, a book mentioned a lot in Hotel New Hampshire) and some of the events are a little too bizarre and unlikely to be believable.

Despite this, I've enjoyed all the John Irving books I've read (this one, Garp and Owen Meany) the stories are ones I can get lost in and they're the sort of books I'll sit down to read for half an hour and still be reading two hours later without even realising.

If you pick at the Hotel New Hampshire, it falls apart, but it's a great read.
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Most Recent Customer Reviews
Awful Book
I am moved to comment on the fact I truly felt let down by this book. After reading The World According to Garp and enjoying it thoroughly I chose to read this. BIG MISTAKE.... Read more
Published 9 months ago by Stephen Pearce
Hotel New Hampshire, John Irving
I loved this book by John Irving, he is such a great writer. The story is made up of larger than life characters (except Lily! Read more
Published 20 months ago by P. A. Cunningham
Eccentric and Entertaining.
I first read this book many years ago when I was a teenager and I loved it. It is completely off the wall and eccentric while having a great storyline which covers different... Read more
Published on 30 Dec 2008 by debbie8355
Please can I have the last ten hours of my life back?
To start with I am a fan of John Irving: "Cider House Rules" was amazing, "Garp" less so but "Hotel New Hampshire" is an unmitigated disaster, a total mess. Read more
Published on 28 May 2007 by Caterkiller
best entry book for John Irving
I think this is the best book to start with if reading John Irving, as it has his trademarks of love, sex (sometimes incestuous), comedy and loss. Read more
Published on 8 Nov 2006 by C. Mitchell
Good stuff
I loved this book. I've read a few Irvings and this is one of my favourites. I'm not good at long books, but don't baulk at an Irving; though I often feel they could be a bit... Read more
Published on 19 July 2006 by Mr. S. Moulster
A mess
This is the first John Irving novel I have read and will most probably be the last. I am completely bewildered by the reviews on this site - are we reading the same book? Read more
Published on 13 Oct 2005 by Demob Happy
A colorful story, but to bizarre for me.
Quirky and bizarre were word used to describe this novel. I certainly agree with bizarre but feel quirky doesn't go quite far enough. Read more
Published on 28 Sep 2005 by R. Britain
My favourite Book of all time
Irving is a amazing, this book manages to touch me every time I read it. It is moving, funny and cleverly written. One of his best! Read more
Published on 23 Jun 2005
You will remember this book
This is the first John Irving book I read. In fact I had never heard of him. This is a real story populated with wonderful characters who will stay with you for a long long time. Read more
Published on 5 Jan 2005 by GeeJayBee
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