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The House of Sand and Fog
by
Andre Dubus III
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This
second novel by Andre Dubus 3rd (son of acclaimed writer Andre Dubus) is about an Iranian immigrant who stumbles into a complex
struggle over the possession of a California house with the
down-on-her-luck woman who used to own it and the sheriff who is in
love with her.
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Reviews
The Washington Post Book
World
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"Elegant
and powerful. . . an unusual and volatile. . . literary thriller."
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Boston Globe
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"House
of Sand and Fog is a page-turner with a beating heart."
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Publishers Weekly
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"This
powerfully written but bleak narrative is a mesmerizing tale of the
American Dream gone terribly awry. Massoud Amir Behrani, a former
colonel in the Iranian Air Force under the Shah, now lives in exile
with his wife and teenage son near San Francisco. Working on a road
crew as a "garbage soldier" by day and as a deli clerk by
night, Behrani is obsessed with restoring his family to the position
of glittering wealth and prestige it once enjoyed. At a county
auction, he sinks his savings into a bungalow seized for non-payment
of taxes, and quickly moves his family into it, planning to resell
the house at a sizable profit. But when the house's previous
occupant, recovering coke addict Kathy Lazaro, resurfaces with valid
claims for repossession, Behrani's plan begins to unravel, and with
it his tightly controlled facade of composure. Tensions between
Lazaro and Behrani quickly escalate into violence, as Lazaro's
lover, a married police officer with a weak spot for lost causes,
decides to take matters into his own hands. The book's horrifying
denouement offers readers a searing study in the wages of pride.
Dubus (Bluesman) writes with an authority regarding the American
lower middle class that is reminiscent of Russell Banks and Richard
Ford, and his limber imagination is capable of drawing the inner
lives of three very different main characters with such compassion
that readers will find their sympathies hopelessly divided. If the
tragedy that he so skillfully orchestrates cries out to be leavened
with a little less desperation and some quiet glimpse of hope, the
keenly perceptive and moving narrative is proof that the son and
namesake of one of our most talented writers has embarked on a
dazzling career in his own right."
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The Philadelphia Inquirer
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"Exceptional
storytelling, true to life....You can't help but be impressed."
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Los Angeles Times
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"The
most rending kind of war is not between two hatreds, but between two
hopes....Dubus sets out the growing confrontation with chilly
ingenuity and a remarkably observant compassion."
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Mirabella
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"Unputdownable...a
page-turner that's a mind-opener..a thriller with moral
complexity."
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Library Journal
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"In
his second novel (after Bluesman, LJ 5/15/93), the son of
noted writer Andre Dubus manages to get deep inside the heads of two
very different characters who clash over a modest house in the San
Francisco suburbs. Kathy is a recovering alcoholic and cokehead who
loses her inherited bungalow for alleged nonpayment of taxes.
Behmini, an Iranian who was an officer in the Shah's air force
before fleeing the revolution, is now struggling to succeed in the
United States. He buys the house at auction, planning to make a
profit on the resale. Kathy skulks around the neighborhood and
eventually confronts the family. When she becomes sexually involved
with the policeman she met at her eviction, a married man with bad
judgment and a drinking problem of his own, he takes up her cause
with explosive results. Dubus's attention to detail and realistic
prose style give the narrative a hard-edged, cinematic quality, but
unlike many movies, its outcome is unexpected. Recommended for all
fiction collections." Reba
Leiding
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New Yorker
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"It's
clear from the start that we're heading for a mess; what makes the
book memorable is Dubus's affecting, subtle portrait of two hostile
but equally fragile camps."
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Publisher:
Vintage Contemporaries Publication Date: 2000 Illustrations:
Yes Pages: 365 p.
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