Books : Home: A Novel (Unabridged)
List Price: $44.95Amazon.com's Price: $23.60 You Save: $21.35 (47%)Prices subject to change.
Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours
Binding: Audio Download
Label: audible.com
Manufacturer: audible.com
Publisher: audible.com
Studio: audible.com
Related Items:
Editorial Review:
Product Description:
Hundreds of thousands were enthralled by the luminous voice of John Ames in Gilead, Marilynne Robinson’s Pulitzer Prize–winning novel. Home is an entirely independent, deeply affecting novel that takes place concurrently in the same locale, this time in the household of Reverend Robert Boughton, Ames’s closest friend. Glory Boughton, aged thirty-eight, has returned to Gilead to care for her dying father. Soon her brother, Jack—the prodigal son of the family, gone for twenty years—comes home too, looking for refuge and trying to make peace with a past littered with tormenting trouble and pain. Jack is one of the great characters in recent literature. A bad boy from childhood, an alcoholic who cannot hold a job, he is perpetually at odds with his surroundings and with his traditionalist father, though he remains Boughton’s most beloved child. Brilliant, lovable, and wayward, Jack forges an intense bond with Glory and engages painfully with Ames, his godfather and namesake. Home is a moving and healing book about families, family secrets, and the passing of the generations, about love and death and faith. It is Robinson’s greatest work, an unforgettable embodiment of the deepest and most universal emotions.
Amazon.com Review: Amazon Best of the Month, September 2008: "What does it mean to come home?" In one way or another, every character in Home is searching for that answer. Glory Boughton, now 38 and lovelorn, has returned to Gilead to care for her dying father. Her wayward brother Jack also finds his way back, though his is an uneasy homecoming, reverberating with the scandal that drove him away twenty years earlier. Glory and Jack unravel their stories slowly, speaking to each other more in movements than in words--a careful glance here, a chair pulled out from the table there--against a domestic backdrop so richly imagined you may be fooled into believing their house is your own. Meanwhile, their father, whose ebullient love for his children is a welcome counterpoint to Glory and Jack's conflicted emotions, experiences his own kind of reckoning as he yearns to understand his troubled son. There is a simplicity to this story that belies the complexity of its characters--they are bound together by a profound capacity for love and by an equally powerful sense of private conviction that tries the ties that bind, but never breaks them. It's a delicate sort of tension that you think would resist exposition--and in fact these characters seem to want nothing more than, as Glory says, to treat "one another's deceptions like truth"--but Marilynne Robinson's fine, tender prose imbues this family's secrets with an overwhelming grace. --Anne Bartholomew
Average Rating: 
Rating: -
I was very disappointed in Home. Very slow and almost boring. I read the reviews prior to purchasing this book and most were favorable. Sorry, but I did not think so. I did finish it but it felt like a struggle!
Rating: -
I absolutely adored Robinson's previous novel, Gilead -- thoughtful, thought-provoking, slow moving in a wonderful, wistful, fulfilling way. Home, which is set at the same time and with the same characters as Gilead, just told from a different perspective, is a disappointment. The main character, Glory, can't hold a candle to the narrator of Gilead, John Ames. Robinson seems to have lost her voice with this novel, or maybe she couldn't find a voice for Glory, who seems not well defined and thus not ... Read More
Rating: -
Robinson's limitations are on full display in this novel. Ironically, to understand home one must know the wild ride of homelessness or at least be able to imagine a darker side to community, as she did with Housekeeping, her first and brilliant novel. The lack of insight here is stifling.
Rating: -
The author creates an absorbing and totally engaging novel that held my attention from beginning to the end, which is saying a lot since this is an audiobook consisting of 10 CDs which equals 12.5 hours of listening time. The book is a study of the family bond and close relationship that develops between the three main adult characters, a brother and sister who return to the family home in Gilead, Iowa, each for reasons of their own, and their father, a retired Presbyterian minister, who is elderly ... Read More
Rating: -
I am looking at all the positive reviews for Gilead and they apply to Home as well: "written in a prose so gravely measured and thoughtful"; "complex thoughts and emotions expressed with a felicity as engaging as it is illuminating"; " demanding, grave and lucid". The problem is that Home is too static and redundant. Either the book should be shorter, or there needs to be a greater number of well developed characters.
I was a bit bothered by the ease with which Glory could be moved ... Read More
|