The Assassins: A Book of Hours


The Assassins: A Book of Hours is a novel by Joyce Carol Oates first published in 1975 by Vanguard Press. A Fawcett Publications paperback edition was issued in 1976.

Plot

"The Assassins is the story of Andrew Petrie, a wealthy right-wing political figure with a reputation for ruthless honesty. More, it is the story of his surviving brothers, Hugh and Stephen, and of his young widow Yvonne. Members of a large, prominent family, they are nevertheless isolated, each alone with his own enemy, his own assassin. In a state of frozen panic, they realize that Andrew's death has robbed them of the object of their hatred, love, religious compassion—all-consuming emotions that had previously cushioned them against the nightmare of their own emptiness. Their conflicting interpretations of reality—as well as the baffling, tragic events that overtake them—constitute a revelation of the contemporary world, both political and private."

Reception

Contemporary reaction to the novel varied widely. Newsweeks Peter S. Prescott deemed The Assassins "a very bad, nearly incoherent novel." Critic Leo Robson at The New Yorker characterizes The Assassins as an "unfairly derided mystic-politico-psycho-sexual thriller."

Retrospective appraisal

Critic G. F. Waller calls Oates's dystopian vision of America an inflection point in her fiction and her "her most forbidding novel to date." Waller summarizes its thesis:
Biographer and literary critic Joanne V. Creighton reports that The Assassins stands in sharp contrast to Oates's previous novel Do With Me As You Will with respect to "spirit": The Assassins "is a grim book offering no hope for the tormented incompleteness of its characters."
In a novel where "critical facts are obscured," the novel tends to "defy both understanding and credibility. Crieghton continues:
Creighton chastens Oates for numerous passages that exhibit "a lamentable verbosity," offering the following as evidence:
Acknowledging the difficulty inherent in conveying in prose "the inchoate emotional experiences of humans," Crieghton registered doubt that Oates's "profuse writing" proves a useful literary approach.