Reader Ratings: 135
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A compelling saga of redemption and renewal from two-time Pulitzer Prize-winner Anthony Shadid tells the story of rebuilding his family's ancestral home in Lebanon amid political strife, and his eventual understanding of the emotions behind the turbulence in the Middle East. "Evocative and beautifully written, House of Stone . . . should be read by anyone who wishes to understand the agonies and hopes of the Middle East." - Kai Bird, Pulitzer Prize-winning... more
Published: February 28, 2012 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt
Genre: Biographies & Memoirs. Non-fiction. 336 pages
The book would be easier to read if it had a more chronological format and was less a mosaic of barely connected episodes.
Full ReviewKnowing that Shadid lost his life shortly before this book was published makes each piece of tile he polished, each plant he nurtured, feel all the more significant.
Full Review. . .Shadid offers a carefully observed meditation not only on Lebanese village life, but on what it is like to try and build a sense of home in the midst of a war zone.
Full ReviewOn display is the ear for dialogue, eye for telling detail, and nose for big ideas expected from Shadid's Middle East dispatches.
Full Review. . .one of the finest memoirs I've read.
Full ReviewIt is a masterpiece, and a terrible reminder of what an empathic guide to the Middle East we lost last month with Shadid’s passing.
Full ReviewThe story of his family's journey to the US is too disjointed to hold the reader's attention and distracts from Shadid's reportage.
Full ReviewSadly, the book remains messy in print, at times disorganized, poorly written and confusing.
Full ReviewA complicated, elegiac, beautiful attempt to reconcile the physical bayt (home) and the spiritual.
Full ReviewDespite its seriousness, it would be a mistake to ignore that "House of Stone" is also very funny.
Full ReviewAt the heart of the book, Mr. Shadid’s third, lies the strong, open voice of its author.
Full Review. . .a setting evoked in the small details noticeable only to a world-class reporter’s eye.
Full ReviewThe flashbacks to his family's past can sometimes seem haphazard and forced.
Full ReviewThese sections about his family are the true gems of the book.
Full Review. . .Shadid's longing is so genuine, and his identification of home so definite, that "House of Stone" builds emotionally, reaching depths that surprise.
Full ReviewHe skillfully reveals himself to us without a hint of romanticism, with only breathtaking prose — a fitting and unintentional elegy.
Full Review. . .a strange and often lovely hybrid — one-third memoir, one-third Middle Eastern history, one-third. . .the Contractor Nightmare Narrative.
Full ReviewAs might be expected from a Pulitzer Prize-winning reporter, Shadid laces his memoir with telling details. . .But the author’s personal voice is also abundant. . .
Full Review. . .the fragile but very real note of hope that ends House of Stone is heartbreaking.
Full ReviewShadid’s generous sense of humor shines as he describes the often difficult characters he employs in the sparsely populated village.
Full Review. . .an evocative tale that makes one marvel at Shadid’s storytelling skills. . .
Full ReviewThis is the last testament of a superb reporter and citizen of the world who had the wisdom to find his bayt.
Full ReviewThere are empathetic sketches, characteristic of Shadid's best journalism, describing his Marjayoun friends - often living reminders of a gentler time.
Full Review. . .the strongest parts of "House of Stone" are those in which Shadid recounts his own life and career.
Full ReviewAs I read his moving memoir, I could picture him in action, using all the gumption he had acquired after years spent in war zones, to make the seemingly impossible repair and restoration of his ancestral home a reality.
Full ReviewThe book would be easier to read if it had a more chronological format and was less a mosaic of barely connected episodes.
Full Review