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Housekeeping

by Marilynne Robinson
Housekeeping

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  • Synopses & Reviews

ISBN13: 9780312424091
ISBN10: 0312424094
Condition: Standard


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Staff Pick

This gorgeous and heartbreaking novel RUINED me. Robinson's prose is deliberate and expansive, her characters vividly delineated, the world of her novel achingly familiar and yet full of astonishment. Recommended By Darla M., Powells.com

Beautifully quiet, quirky, heartbreaking, transcendent. There are so many reasons to love Marilynne Robinson’s Housekeeping. Above all for me: the sentences. Her language is so beautiful that it occurred to me one day, simply reading a description of two women looking flushed in the steam of cooking stock in a kitchen, that Robinson’s language made me want to try harder to find things to be joyful about in my day. Recommended By Gigi L., Powells.com

Synopses & Reviews

Publisher Comments

A modern classic, Housekeeping is the story of Ruth and her younger sister, Lucille, who grow up haphazardly, first under the care of their competent grandmother, then of two comically bumbling great-aunts, and finally of Sylvie, their eccentric and remote aunt. The family house is in the small Far West town of Fingerbone set on a glacial lake, the same lake where their grandfather died in a spectacular train wreck, and their mother drove off a cliff to her death. It is a town "chastened by an outsized landscape and extravagant weather, and chastened again by an awareness that the whole of human history had occurred elsewhere." Ruth and Lucille's struggle toward adulthood beautifully illuminates the price of loss and survival, and the dangerous and deep undertow of transience.

Review

"Here's a first novel that sounds as if the author has been treasuring it up all her life...You can feel in the book a gathering voluptuous release of confidence, a delighted surprise at the unexpected capacities of language, a close, careful fondness for people that we thought only saints felt." Anatole Broyard, The New York Times

Review

"I found myself reading slowly, then more slowly — this is not a novel to be hurried through, for every sentence is a delight." Doris Lessing

Review

"The language is so precise, so distilled and so beautiful one does not want to miss any pleasure it might yield up to patience." Charles McGrath. The New York Times Books of the Century

About the Author

Marilynne Robinson is the author of the novel Gilead and two books of nonfiction, Mother Country and The Death of Adam. She teaches at the University of Iowa Writers' Workshop.

 


4.4 10

What Our Readers Are Saying

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Average customer rating 4.4 (10 comments)

`
lukas , February 02, 2014 (view all comments by lukas)
Marilynne Robinson's debut novel, which the NYT called one of the best novels of the past 3 decades. I prefer her second, the Pulitzer prize winning "Gilead." This reminded me a bit of Willa Cather's books, especially "O Pioneers" and "My Antonia."

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Almeda Roth , June 23, 2010 (view all comments by Almeda Roth)
A captivating, elegaic novel about family and transcience and what it means to be at home, filled with startlingly exact and illuminating moments of prose. I wore my pen out underlining sentences.

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Adrien-Alice , January 18, 2010 (view all comments by Adrien-Alice)
Oh, oh, oh. I just finished this book--it's short but potent with some of the most gorgeous prose I've read in a long time.

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bart , January 06, 2010 (view all comments by bart)
Unique and unforgettable, I find myself returning to this wonderful novel often. Such luminous prose that I gave up on my highlighter after only a few pages. Reward yourself by reading of this book!

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WordYearner , January 01, 2010
Oh, Marilynne Robinson. I cannot read your books; I can only eat them. I cannot imagine your characters; I must become them. My world has housekeeping; your world has housekeeping with color, taste, brooms and dust, and the haunting effects of wonderment and poetry. Your book changed me. It took me into someone else, and then allowed me back. I started it over and over and over; finishing it was a grief. But I am blessed with no memory to speak of, so I'll meet it again in awhile.

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`
kxorr , January 01, 2010
Excellent book.

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OneMansView , January 30, 2009 (view all comments by OneMansView)
Which predominates: overwritten tedium or brilliance? (3.5 *s) This is a book that is flooded with descriptions, imagery, and contemplation that can, from sentence to sentence, seem odd, difficult, and overwritten and then insightful, lyrical, and poetic. The central character is Sylvie, a thirty-something female, who has returned to Fingerbone, an obscure western town set on a large lake, to care for her two nieces who have lost both their grandmother and mother. The story is told from the standpoint of Ruthie, one of the girls. A heavy cloud hands over the entire book as death, impermanence, the power of water and the wind, cold weather, forests, mud, deprivation, and the like are constants in this rather gloomy story. It is a formidable environment that Sylvie and Ruthie, largely unsuccessfully, attempt to navigate, including social expectations and illusions. Despite an unspecified life of trouble, there is a strength and resoluteness to Sylvie that resonates. The plot is minimal. The characters serve as a means for the author to develop her themes. The book is difficult and tedious with digressions interlaced throughout, not to mention getting past the author’s obscure word choices, yet there is brilliance on most every page.

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P R , January 05, 2009 (view all comments by P R)
Marilynne Robinson's "Housekeeping" should be savored like fine wine- drink it in slowly to appreciate the nuances. Like all other prose-poetry, it not just about the story, it is also about the language that tells the story. This fine little book is filled with rich images and bone-achingly sad lives that are filled with possibilities.

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kat , September 17, 2007 (view all comments by kat)
Through the coming-of-age reflections of the narrator, Ruthie, Marilynne Robinson explores the idea that family never dies. Instead of the usual skeletons in the closet, however, Ruthie’s dead family members are more like ghosts that not only haunt the nearby lake, but also leave bits of their memory and even themselves in living relatives. While Robinson’s main characters are “outsiders” and “transients,” she constructs their motives and personalities so well that one cannot help but understand that their choices are fated as surely as the blood that runs through their veins. A reviewer called Housekeeping a “modern-day classic” and I have to agree in that wading through her long, complicated sentences was reminiscent of high school required reading. But I hasten to add that this is not a bad thing. As with the reading of most classics, the occasionally necessary re-reading of paragraphs and the slower pace of processing needed to fully ingest the author’s craft was, unequivocally, worth it.

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Julyemarie , August 08, 2007 (view all comments by Julyemarie)
A great story and great characters. I found the prose to be a bit lengthy to comprehend but over all, a good read.

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Product Details

ISBN:
9780312424091
Binding:
Trade Paperback
Publication date:
11/01/2004
Publisher:
ST MARTINS PRESS
Pages:
224
Height:
.57IN
Width:
5.52IN
Thickness:
.75
Number of Units:
1
Copyright Year:
2004
Author:
Marilynne Robinson
Subject:
Family life
Subject:
General Fiction
Subject:
Literature-A to Z

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