The Hotel New Hampshire | Themes
A major theme in The Hotel New Hampshire, as is the case in most of Irving's novels, is illusion versus reality. Some critics have pointed to the fairy-tale quality of the novel, and certainly the tame bear, the dog named Sorrow, who keeps reappearing in different forms, and the almost mystically diminutive stature of Lilly, the younger daughter, contribute to this sense of fantasy. But the concept of reality as illusory occurs on a deeper thematic level as well. John Berry says early in the novel, "The first of my father's illusions was that bears could survive the life lived by...
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