Home

by Marilynne Robinson

HarperCollins Publishers Ltd | August 25, 2008 | Hardcover

Based on 13 ratings | Rate this

In 1980, Marilynne Robinson drew the devotion of readers with her debut novel, Housekeeping, a book that won the PEN/Hemingway Award and has become a modern classic. In 2004, her second novel, Gilead, was published to critical acclaim and won both the National Book Critics Circle Award and the Pulitzer Prize. Now, Marilynne Robinson has written her third stunning novel -- Home.

Set in the rural town of Gilead, Iowa, in 1961, Home is the story of the Boughton family, of the aged Reverend Boughton and of his middle-aged daughter, Glory, who returns to the family home to care for her elderly father after a failed engagement. But it is also the story of Jack Boughton, a troubled but brilliant son and brother, estranged from the family for 20 years. Looking for refuge from a secret he won't reveal, by turns distant and compassionate, Jack has returned as well. Caught between the betrayals of the past, hopes for the future, and the mingling of love and resentment in the present, these three characters explore all that it means to come home.

Home reflects the story of Reverend John Ames as told in Gilead, and the two novels complement each other, but like good neighbours they also stand apart. Marilynne Robinson has produced another masterwork, a rich and moving novel that is both tender and healing.

Usually ships in 1-2 weeks
This item is eligible for FREE SHIPPING.
See details
save 34%

$19.76


was $29.95

$18.77


Member Price

or, Used from $5.04

add to cart
add to wish list add to gift list
Found in: Fiction and Literature
  • Was this review helpful?
    2
    0
    Trememdous Character Based Story, Better than Gilead
    by Nicola Mansfield
    • Top Book Reviewer
    5 years ago

    How to start a review on this book? There is very little plot. Jack, black-sheep of the Reverend Boughton's family, returns home after a twenty year absence. At home is his younger sister, who has fallen upon hard times and his dying father, the Reverend. The book revolves around the characters and how they interact. The Reverend Boughton desperately wants to know the condition of Jack's soul before he dies. Jack is unable to give him this solace though he tries. Jack has sinned deeply during his twenty year absence and yet there are glimpses into a good person, which the reader of Gilead will already know. So here is a man both sinner and worker of grace. Yet, unable to tell his father his secrets. The theme of parental disappointment in their own adult child is also strong and I was particularly hit with this quotation from the book. I think this is a feeling that many parents of grown children who have strayed from the path will resonate with. "Kinder to him! I thanked God for him every day of his life, no matter how much grief, how much sorrow -- and at the end of it all there is only more grief, more sorrow, and his life will go on that way, no help for it now You see something beautiful in a child, and you almost live for it, you feel as though you would die for it, but it isn't yours to keep or to protect. And if the child becomes a man who has n o respect for himself, it's just destroyed till you can hardly remember what it was ... It's like watching a child die in your arms." [pg. 294] This book is a companion piece to Robinson's Pulitzer Prize winning Gilead. Those who have read Gilead will recognise that this family appeared in that book. This book is entirely set in 1961 and Reverend Ames and his family play a small part in this tale. Those who enjoyed Gilead will most certainly enjoy Home. To me, Home, is the better of the two. The depth of characterization is tremendous and the essence of life and death hangs in the air throughout the book. There is a lot of dialogue in this story and less theological dissertations than Gilead, which I must admit my mind wandered through somewhat. Though there is a heavy Christian theme of redemption and grace. I did find the ending rather anti-climatic though as both Gilead and Home present a secret that Jack is keeping and the secret is revealed at the end of both books so once one book has been read the secret seems pointless as a plot point in the other. Though Home is independent of Gilead and publishers are promoting that they can be read as stand-alones. I think there is a knowledge of Jack, an insider's viewpoint, that strengthens his character in Home which readers who have not previously read Gilead will not recognize. Therefore, I recommend the books being read in the order they were published. If characterization is more compelling to your reading than a fast moving plot you will enjoy Home very much, as will anyone who has read and enjoyed Gilead

  • My Gift List
  • My Wish List
  • Shopping Cart