The Heart is a Lonely Hunter

by

Carson McCullers

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The Heart is a Lonely Hunter: Part 1, Chapter 1 Summary & Analysis

Summary
Analysis
In an unnamed mill town in the Deep South live two men—both of them are deaf and mute, and they are constant companions. One of the men is a large, stout Greek man named Spiros Antonapoulos. The other is a tall, reserved, well-dressed man named John Singer. Every day, Singer and Antonapoulos walk arm-in-arm to Main Street, where their jobs are.  Antonapoulos works for his cousin, who owns a fruit and candy store, while Singer works across the street as a silverware engraver.
The opening passage of the novel introduces two characters who are very different, yet bound together by the unique struggles they’ve faced as disabled individuals living in the Deep South. Singer and Antonapoulos’s close relationship, read literally, is the result of two men realizing they must stick together if they want to be understood and supported—but over the years, some scholars and critics have suggested that McCullers may have used deafness and muteness as an abstract allegory to describe the alienating experience of being homosexual in the South in the 1930s.
Themes
Loneliness and Isolation Theme Icon
Communication and Self-Expression Theme Icon
The Individual vs. Society Theme Icon
The American South Theme Icon
Though Singer talks expressively and frequently to Antonapoulos using sign language, Antonapoulos rarely uses his hands to speak at all—and when he does, he uses “vague, fumbling signs” and communicates only his most basic needs. The two of them share a small upstairs apartment in town. Antonapoulos sleeps in a large, plush bed while Singer sleeps in a plain narrow cot; the two of them share a bedroom. Antonapoulos does the cooking and Singer does the cleaning, and some nights, the two men play chess together, though Singer enjoys the game much more than Antonapoulos does. Antonapoulos sometimes steals candy from his cousin’s store, which makes Singer uncomfortable.
This passage introduces the many differences between Singer and Antonapoulos. While Singer is animated, open, curious, and serious, Antonapoulos is cold, uncommunicative, and occasionally self-indulgent. This suggests that what binds the two men together is not true friendship, understanding, or love, but instead the simple fact of their shared disability. They are treated well by their neighbors but are, on a fundamental level, isolated from everyone else due to their deafness, and they have only each other for support.
Themes
Loneliness and Isolation Theme Icon
Communication and Self-Expression Theme Icon
The Individual vs. Society Theme Icon
After 10 years spent together living in the mill town in this way, Singer and Antonapoulos are in their early 30s. Though many of the mill workers in town are poor, desperate, and hungry, Singer and Antonapoulos are doing well for themselves. One day, Antonapoulos falls suddenly ill. His doctor orders him to stop drinking, and though Singer urges Antonapoulos to follow the doctor’s orders, Antonapoulos becomes “sulky” and distant. Even after the illness passes, Antonapoulos is a changed man—he is irritable and restless and begins disrupting his and Singer’s carefully-planned schedule by going out drinking each night. He often steals from bars and restaurants, and Singer pays for the things Antonapoulos takes.
Even as Antonapoulos’s behavior becomes more erratic and unpredictable, McCullers never cites the source of the change in his personality. Singer, too, is flustered and confused by his friend’s increasingly sullen and adversarial disposition—and this fact makes him feel isolated from the person he’d thought to be his constant, steadfast, predictable companion.
Themes
Loneliness and Isolation Theme Icon
Communication and Self-Expression Theme Icon
The Individual vs. Society Theme Icon
Antonapoulos’s state worsens and he begins getting in trouble with the law. Singer tries to remain patient, but finds himself under a lot of stress as he spends his savings constantly bailing Antonapoulos out of jail. Antonapoulos’s cousin, who has changed his name from his original Greek name to Charlie Parker, is unhelpful. Soon, all of Singer’s savings are depleted, yet Antonapoulos continues acting out.
Even though Antonapoulos has family in town, no one really cares for the man the way Singer does. This demonstrates the depths of their isolation, and the difficulty on the horizon for Singer as his friend pulls further and further away.
Themes
Loneliness and Isolation Theme Icon
The Individual vs. Society Theme Icon
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One afternoon, Charlie Parker hands Singer a letter informing Singer that Parker is placing Antonapoulos in the state asylum 200 miles from town. Singer is distressed. He writes a note on the pad he keeps in his pocket for communicating with others, explaining that he wants Antonapoulos to stay. Parker insists, however, that Antonapoulos must go away. Singer knows there is nothing he can do, and, over the course of the week, prepares for Antonapoulos’s departure. He talks to his companion with his hands nonstop, hoping to express “all the thoughts that [have] ever been in his mind and heart.”  On the day of Antonapoulos’s departure, Singer brings him to the bus station to meet Parker. Antonapoulos hardly pays attention as Singer bids him goodbye.
Though Singer is desperate not to be separated from his friend, it is clear that Antonapoulos is a burden to his cousin. Misunderstood—and mistreated—due to his disability, Antonapoulos is sent away. It’s already clear at this early point in the novel that society is not built for men like Singer and Antonapoulos, and even though Singer tries to help his friend up until the very last moment they have together, Antonapoulos seems to have completely walled himself off from help or friendship.
Themes
Loneliness and Isolation Theme Icon
Communication and Self-Expression Theme Icon
The Individual vs. Society Theme Icon
Quotes
The next few weeks pass in a blur. Singer, painfully lonely, tries to comfort himself with memories of his life before Antonapoulos. He recalls his youth in Chicago, reflecting on his struggles to speak due to self-consciousness about his voice. Singer begins sleeping more and more, and soon finds his life full of vivid “half-dreams” about Antonapoulos.
This passage provides more insight into Singer’s character, and underscores the reason why his relationship with Antonapoulos—another man who communicated as he himself did—was so important to him.
Themes
Loneliness and Isolation Theme Icon
Communication and Self-Expression Theme Icon
As winter turns to spring, Singer tries to change his routine. He begins taking long walks in the evenings and sleeping only a few hours each night. He starts eating his meals at the New York Café, a bar and restaurant two blocks from his home. On his first visit to the café, he hands the proprietor, Biff Brannon, a piece of paper describing the kinds of things he likes to eat for each meal and the prices he’s able to pay. Brannon nods in agreement, and from then on, Singer eats at the café three times each day. As spring warms and turns to summer, Singer’s agitation gives way to a kind of calm—but he continues his long, lonely walks through town each evening.
In this passage, Singer two makes dual, conflicting attempts: one is to try to ameliorate his loneliness and isolation by starting to hang around the New York Café. But strangely, the other is to preserve it by taking lots of long, solitary walks. Singer seems torn between the desire for companionship and the fear of being rejected or misunderstood.
Themes
Loneliness and Isolation Theme Icon
Communication and Self-Expression Theme Icon
The Individual vs. Society Theme Icon