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The Red House [Hardcover]

Mark Haddon
3.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)
List Price: CDN$ 29.95
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Book Description

Jun 12 2012
A dazzlingly inventive novel about modern family, from the author of The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time.
 
The set up of Mark Haddon's brilliant new novel is simple: Richard, a wealthy doctor, invites his estranged sister Angela and her family to join his for a week at a vacation home in the English countryside. Richard has just re-married and inherited a willful stepdaughter in the process; Angela has a feckless husband and three children who sometimes seem alien to her. All eight arrive with low expectations for a pleasant holiday.
 
But because of Haddon's extraordinary narrative technique, the stories of these eight people are anything but simple. Told through the alternating viewpoints of each character, The Red House becomes a symphony of long-held grudges, fading dreams and rising hopes, tightly-guarded secrets and illicit desires, all adding up to a portrait of contemporary family life that is bittersweet, comic, and deeply felt.
 
The Red House is a literary tour-de-force that illuminates the puzzle of family in a profoundly empathetic manner--a novel sure to entrance the millions of readers of The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time.

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Review

“Haddon writes like a scalpel-wielding angel . . .”
Boston Globe
 
Haddon’s tone is flawless, so compassionate and detailed and precise that this novel beguiles without cloying, illuminates without demystifying. All happy families may be alike, but oh, how wonderful to witness the myriad unhappiness of the others, conjured by a virtuoso wordsmith.”
The Globe and Mail

“The ever surprising, often shocking, often moving and highly entertaining Mark Haddon has come up with a novel about family secrets and lies. It’s every bit as charmingly idiosyncratic as his brilliant The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time.”
Daily Mirror (UK)
 
“The plot feels organic rather than contrived, the characters convincing throughout, the tone compassionate and the writing wise. A novel to savor.”
Kirkus (starred review)
 
“It’s unlikely, however, that future visitors will find The Red House on the shelves since, with writing as elegant and truthful as this, readers will wish to keep their copies close at hand to savour again.”
Daily Mail (UK)
 
“He is almost unrivalled at the notoriously tricky task of giving an authentic voice to children, and his ability to pinpoint the comic aspects of the everyday scenarios.”
Sunday Times
 
“This holiday from hell gives a crafty and funny spin to the confusions of family life today.” 
The Independent (UK)
 
“Each voice flows into the other, one person to the next. You can almost feel a camera hovering above them, zooming in and cutting away.”
USA Today
 
“. . . it’s Haddon’s peculiar structure that raises this family drama to something exceptional. He’s perfected a constantly shifting perspective that keeps our sympathies from taking root in any one of these characters. . . . the voices are so distinct that once you can keep up, the effect is symphonic. . . . Haddon wends a careful path in this novel between the effervescent comedy of quirky families and the bitter tragedy of dysfunctional ones.”
The Washington Post
 
“The novel’s pleasure, there in spades, lies in Haddon’s caustic wit, his pitch-perfect nailing of each of his characters, and in his absurdly concise descriptions of the most banal activities . . . In providing it, Haddon proves himself, once again, to be a brilliant, modern observer and cataloguer of human vice and frailty.”
National Post

“Haddon, writing in the third person, takes us into one consciousness then another — and then he adds voices that are less precisely located, made up of snippets from songs, glancing references to books, films and television, random facets of the present, fragments of learning and lore, the ready-made forms of speech we all revert to, other places, other people, other times... There are also passages of authorial distancing that are highly wrought prose poetry, sinking far back into the past or into the landscape itself, the spirit of the place: choric. The effect is oddly like a rude, demotic, masculine revision of Virginia Woolf.”
Evening Standard

“It’s a fluid, fast-paced story, with a cast of characters who are so meticulously defined that you have to marvel at the depth of the author’s imagination. Adeptly written and thoroughly engrossing, The Red House really is a return to form for Haddon.”
Time Out – Book of the Week
 
“The ever surprising, often shocking, often moving and highly entertaining Mark Haddon has come up with a novel about family secrets and lies. It’s every bit as charmingly idiosyncratic as his brilliant The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time.”
Henry Sutton, Daily Mirror

About the Author

MARK HADDON is the author if the international bestseller The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time, which won the Los Angeles Times Art Seidenbaum Award for First Fiction and the Whitbread Book of the Year award; and the New York Times bestseller, A Spot of Bother. In addition to The Talking Horse and the Sad Girl and the Village Under the Sea, a collection of poetry, Haddon has also written and illustrated numerous award-winning children's books and television screenplays.

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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful
3.0 out of 5 stars Narrative style was difficult for me July 11 2012
By Luanne Ollivier #1 HALL OF FAME TOP 10 REVIEWER
Format:Hardcover
I loved Mark Haddon's best seller The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time. I haven't read any of his other books, but based on that one read I was eager to pick up his latest - The Red House.

Richard and Angela are brother and sister living in England. They rarely see each other, but following the death of their mother, Richard, a wealthy doctor, invites his sister, her husband and their three children to vacation with him for a week in the country side. Richard has recently remarried and his new wife and step daughter will also be there.

You can see lots of angst and fodder for thought in just the set up - estrangement, death, grief, family squabbles and more. Angela and her family are rife with problems.

I've had this book for a bit and have been picking it up and putting it down, unable to consume it at prolonged sittings. The book is told in a 'stream of conciousness' narrative. Each of the eight characters' thoughts and actions can appear at any time. Many times it's not clear who is speaking - chapters begin with She for example. As I read further and began to know each character and their way of thinking it became easier to identify the current speaker. But, then sometimes Haddon throws in passages from a book someone is reading or lists of things that really have no bearing on anything.

The Red House has been leaping onto bestseller lists everywhere. I find myself feeling a bit lost, like the kid who doesn't get the joke. For I found Red House disconcerting, disturbing and demoralizing by turns. Although I agree that Haddon's explorations of his characters' desires, needs and wants are quite intimate and thought provoking, I could only take so much at a sitting. Hence, the length of time it took me to finish the book.

There's no denying that Haddon has explored family dysfunction in great depth with an inventive vehicle to carry those observations. However, there seemed to be no resolution from first page to last. The characters are still nursing the same angst as they were in the beginning. I realize that not every book needs to have a happy ending or ends all tied up, but I felt no sense of satisfaction on turning the last page. Rather, just relief that I had finished.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful
3.0 out of 5 stars More Bookish Thoughts... Sep 11 2012
By Reader Writer Runner TOP 50 REVIEWER
Format:Hardcover
In Mark Haddon's newest novel, eight family members who all carry secrets, longings and resentments spend a week together near "the fine sandy beaches of Herefordshire." This uncomfortable mix includes the prosperous but career-stressed Richard; his vulnerable and sensitive wife, Louisa; Louisa's sharp-edged, sarcastic teenager, Melissa; Richard's sister, Angela, who still mourns the loss of her stillborn baby eighteen years earlier, eats for comfort, and worries that she will eventually become demented like her mother; Angela's husband, Dominic, embroiled in an affair with a much younger woman; and their three children: hormonal Alex, religious Daisy and nervous Benjy.

"The Red House" reads like a dour exploration of family dysfunction in which the author interweaves symbolism with his characters' inner thoughts and dialogue. Each new paragraph contains the stream-of-consciousness of a different voice, causing the writing to seem pretentious, confusing and, at times, bizarre. Haddon does interest the reader enough to wonder whether the vacation will lead to anguish or solace and he does effectively show how constant attacks by loved ones lead to defenselessness.

The story desperately needs a dose of the witty humour that characterized "The Curious Incident of The Dog in The Nighttime" and "A Spot of Bother." Without it, "The Red House"'s forced, artificial feel makes the book seem much longer than it actually is.
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3.0 out of 5 stars Could have been better May 9 2013
By Jan
Format:Kindle Edition|Amazon Verified Purchase
This is going to sound weird, but the middle of the book is great! The beginning and the end are really not! I almost gave up on this book from page one to about page 50 (I read on a kindle, so traditional page numbers are hard to estimate). I couldn't get involved with the characters, couldn't care to remember who was who.

However, that being said, Haddon eventually got my attention and I don't regret having read it. But that's about it.
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