Books Review

The Hour of the Star

Book | Clarice Lispector
By Jeff Brewer

The Hour of the Star shines brightly.

Originally published in 1977, Brazilian novelist Clarice Lispector's final work of fiction The Hour of the Star has recently been re-issued by New Directions with a new translation by Lispector's biographer, Benjamin Moser. In this slim novella, Lispector uses an intricate narrative structure in order to represent a peculiar state of mind. Rodrigo, a well-off and cultured man, struggles to tell the story of the sad life of Macabéa, an unhygienic, sickly, unlovable, and an altogether "un-ideal" typist living in the slums of Rio de Janeiro. Although Rodrigo claims he's the only person who could love Macabéa—if only because she's the subject of his narrative—he really tells her story as a way to thwart his own isolation. Lispector employs odd sentence fragments and erratic grammatical choices to highlight the importance of imagination as a means for her characters to liberate themselves from their banal existences. Through Rodrigo's narrative, Lispector artfully ponders the fate of her characters, and their fears and desires, in a harsh and unforgiving cityscape. Startlingly original and profoundly sad, The Hour of the Star is a provocative work by a highly influential author who should be more widely read.

TAGS: Brazil, death, music, postmodernism, psychological fiction,

FACTS: Released: November 2011, (New Directions); Pages: 84