Review:
Kim Brooks's debut novel has many of the ingredients needed for a memorable work: an evocative sense of place and time; finely drawn characters; taut, limpid prose... Brooks [...] has ably presented the complex, ambiguous relationships between her characters... [I]n Ana Beidler, Brooks has created a striking character." New York Times Book Review
[an] ambitious, wildly successful novel Manifesting masterful control of her characters and plot, Brooks delivers a titular protagonist who more than carries her weight The best activist novels weave together personal and political so seamlessly that the reader is equally invested in, and learns as much from, the outcomes of both. The Houseguest is one such novel. Bravely choosing one of history's most horrifying milieus as her blackboard, Brooks brings to vivid life the lesson that for better and for worse, people change the world, and the world changes people, and the best we can hope for is that some of the time, those changes are for the betterment of us all.” Chicago Tribune
Heartbreaking, profound, and brimming with rich historical detail, it’s a different kind of Holocaust story, set on American soil in 1941: a time when minding one’s own business was the norm, when turning a blind eye allowed genocide to occur right under our collective noses... Her quiet, pre-WWII America demonstrates voyeurism at its finest... In these chapters, it’s easy to remember Brooks is a Chicagoan herself. Her descriptions of the city smooth and brutal” demonstrate familiarity and unflinching honesty... Throughout the book, Brooks writes beautiful descriptions that are both stunning and laden with meaning too many to possibly share here. Yet her prose, as gorgeous as it can be, is never purely aesthetic, because her illustrations of these lives and these cities on the eve of World War II are the heart of her story.” The Chicago Review of Books
"American readers are likely to find themselves haunted by parallels to the current refugee crisis” in Europe, when we are yet again just far enough removed from the daily struggle to survive, and when we have the luxury to debate our options rather than face excruciating consequences. In these harrowing and beautiful pages, Brooks uses an intricately drawn cast of characters, including a seductive refugee named Ana Beidler, to depict the ambiguities of taking as well as delaying action. By the time we reach the transcendent closing pages of The Houseguest, we realize that a certain consolation may be possible for the living, but it’s never quite enough to compensate for the numberless dead. -Elizabeth Rosner, NBCC
A kaleidoscope of dazzling prose.” Louisville Eccentric Observer Weekly
Kim Brooks weaves a complex story that spans countries, states, and venues This intricately told novel depicting the minutiae of domestic life and relationships, loss and grief, delves into the dark psychology of the characters and their layered and loaded interactions The ending of the novel will reward readers with a twist that ties up loose ends but also presents more questions about these characters facing tough situations. Descriptive moments of levity depicting pre-World War II Jewish life in Europe and the Yiddish theater provide a window into a vibrant world and add another layer to this story that keeps the reader guessing until the end.” Jewish Book Council
Told with compassion, The Houseguest by Kim Brooks (Counterpoint) is a vibrant debut novel, set in America on the eve of the country’s entry into World War II when Jewish refugees are desperately trying to escape Europe. At the outset, a rabbi in Utica, New York convinces a local junk dealer and his family to take in a European refugee, the volatile and charming actress of the book’s title. As the characters feel the impact of the war in Europe, they each reach out in their own way to fight.” Jewish Woman Magazine
[A] searing debut novel The chain of events that follows is tense, emotional, and brilliantly evocative of a tragic time. This is a notable first novel with a voice all its own.” ShoreNews Today
Kim Brooks’ debut novel The Houseguest offers a refreshing perspective on an often overlooked facet of Holocaust: that of the American Jew A dramatic tale without the melodrama, Brooks’ debut is immersive and bold, and offers, by way of shining light on the domestic side of the war, a welcomed addition to the world of Holocaust literature.” The Jewniverse
Kim Brooks’ first novel reminds us that those who cannot remember the past are condemned to repeat it Brooks has assembled a compelling cast of characters [T] his is a powerful book.” Historical Novel Society
Every image, metaphor, and character is carefully crafted to build a portrait of a vibrant culture and to illustrate that the ultimate inhumanity is ignoring people; the highest good is caring. With the emotional depth and lyricism of Jonathan Safran Foer’s Everything Is Illuminated, and the flawed personalities and lavish imagery of Dara Horn’s The World to Come, this witty, moving, and literary paean to a people bursts with the depth and magic of a Chagall painting.” Booklist Starred Review
This sophisticated first novel considers the response by Americans Jews to the ever more insistent evidence of racial conflagration across the Atlantic [A] timely, psychologically questing debut Mature in tone and unhurried in pace, Brooks' novel is at its best in its portraits of unhappy men confronted by cataclysmic events in the world and unexpressed longings at home.” Kirkus
How odd that a novel set in 1941 should be one of the timeliest and most urgent books of 2016. Filled with intrigue and desperation and beauty, The Houseguest isn’t just about refugees, but about refuge itself, in all its forms. A bold and gorgeous debut.” Rebecca Makkai, author of The Hundred-Year House
"The Houseguest explores important questions what is your responsibility to another person? If you could save another from terrible harm, what would you do? Kim Brooks answers through her cast of beautifully drawn, deeply human characters and a story that does not let you go. This is a masterful novel; Kim Brooks is a fantastic writer and this is a necessary and important book.” Karen E. Bender, author of Refund, a Finalist for the National Book Award
The Houseguest is a vivid and accomplished debut about America in the few months before our entry into the second world war. It resonates powerfully with our complicated and troubling modern age, and Brooks tells not only the sweeping tale of a country grappling with a global crisis but also an intimate story of individuals: what they long for and fear, and what brings them hope and peace, however fleeting.” Edan Lepucki, author of California
Kim Brooks is a time traveler, a magician, a surgeon of the human psyche. The Houseguest takes the familiar facts of the Second World War and transmutes them into a story that is exquisite, necessary, luminous, and wholly new. This is a book of marvels.” Abby Geni, author of The Lightkeepers
Kim Brooks is a terrifically talented writer whose fiction is ambitious, sophisticated, and psychologically discerning. Her fluency in the language of complex relationships and dark psychology brings to mind the work of Ann Beattie, Mary Gaitskill, and Alice Munro, and her sense of the story the work of Tobias Wolff and F. Scott Fitzgerald. Such combinations are difficult to beat.” Ethan Canin, author of New York Times Bestseller America America
The Houseguest introduces blazing talent: Kim Brooks invokes the spirit of Malamud, the dialogue of HBO, the vividness of Van Gogh. She explores her difficult subject with grace and ease and not a single emotional misstep. This isn’t a book you will be able to put down. At the end, I cried.” Yelena Akhtiorskaya, author of Panic in a Suitcase
About the Author:
Kim Brooks is a graduate of the Iowa Writers’ Workshop, where she was a Teaching-Writing Fellow. She has earned fellowships from the Michener-Copernicus Foundation, the Corporation of Yaddo, and the Posen Foundation. Her fiction has appeared in Glimmer Train, One Story, The Missouri Review and other journals, and her essays have appeared in Salon, Buzzfeed and New York Magazine. Her memoir Small Animals (Flatiron/Macmillan) will be published in 2017. She is the personal essays editor at Salon and lives in Chicago with her family.
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