MoreTravel International Travel Store
 Location:  Home» Travel Guides and Reference » Popular Fiction » House of Sand and Fog (Oprah's Book Club) (Vintage Contemporaries)  
Categories
Camera & Photo
Dictionaries & Language
GPS & Navigation
Luggage & Accessories
Laptops & Notebooks
Portable Audio/Visual
Regional & International Cuisine
Travel Guides and Reference
Travel Magazines
Travel DVDs
Women's Swimwear
Men's Swimwear

House of Sand and Fog (Oprah's Book Club) (Vintage Contemporaries)

House of Sand and Fog (Oprah's Book Club)  (Vintage Contemporaries)

enlarge enlarge 
Author: Andre Dubus Iii
Publisher: Vintage
Category: Book

List Price: $14.95
Buy Used: $0.01
You Save: $14.94 (100%)



Rating: 3.5 out of 5 stars 749 reviews
Sales Rank: 14944

Media: Paperback
Edition: Trade
Pages: 365
Number Of Items: 1
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.5
Dimensions (in): 7.8 x 5.2 x 0.9

ISBN: 0375727345
Dewey Decimal Number: 813.54
EAN: 9780375727344
ASIN: 0375727345

Publication Date: March 1, 2000
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
Shipping: Expedited shipping available
Shipping: International shipping available
Condition: Help save a tree. Buy all your used books from Green Earth Books. Read -> Recycle -> Reuse!

Also Available In:

  • Paperback - House of Sand and Fog (Oprah's Book Club)
  • Kindle Edition - House of Sand and Fog (Oprah's Book Club)
  • Paperback - House of Sand and Fog : A Novel (Vintage Contemporaries Ser.)
  • Hardcover - House of Sand and Fog (Oprah's Book Club)
  • Paperback - House Of Sand And Fog
  • Hardcover - House of Sand and Fog
  • Turtleback - House of Sand and Fog (Oprah's Book Club)
  • School & Library Binding - House of Sand and Fog (Oprah's Book Club) (Vintage Contemporaries)
  • Audio Cassette - House of Sand and Fog (Oprah's Book Club) (Oprah's Book Club (New York, N.Y.).)
  • Paperback - House Of Sand and Fog
  • Hardcover - House of Sand and Fog (Oprah's Book Club)
  • Paperback - House of Sand and Fog (Oprah's Book Club)
  • Paperback - The House of Sand and Fog
  • Paperback - House of Sand and Fog (Oprah's Book Club) (Vintage Contemporaries)
  • Audio Download - House of Sand and Fog (Oprah's Book Club) (Unabridged)
  • Hardcover - House of Sand and Fog (Oprah's Book Club)
  • Audio Cassette - House of Sand and Fog (Oprah's Book Club)
  • Paperback - House of Sand and Fog (Oprah's Book Club)

Similar Items:

  • The Garden of Last Days: A Novel
  • Caucasia: A Novel
  • The Story of Edgar Sawtelle: A Novel (Oprah Book Club #62)
  • The Spirit Catches You and You Fall Down
  • The Kite Runner

Editorial Reviews:

Amazon.com Review
Oprah Book Club Selection, November 2000: Andre Dubus III wastes no time in capturing the dark side of the immigrant experience in America at the end of the 20th century. House of Sand and Fog opens with a highway crew composed of several nationalities picking up litter on a hot California summer day. Massoud Amir Behrani, a former colonel in the Iranian military under the Shah, reflects on his job-search efforts since arriving in the U.S. four years before: "I have spent hundreds of dollars copying my credentials; I have worn my French suits and my Italian shoes to hand-deliver my qualifications; I have waited and then called back after the correct waiting time; but there is nothing." The father of two, Behrani has spent most of the money he brought with him from Iran on an apartment and furnishings that are too expensive, desperately trying to keep up appearances in order to enhance his daughter's chances of making a good marriage. Now the daughter is married, and on impulse he sinks his remaining funds into a house he buys at auction, thus unwittingly putting himself and his family on a trajectory to disaster. The house, it seems, once belonged to Kathy Nicolo, a self-destructive alcoholic who wants it back. What starts out as a legal tussle soon escalates into a personal confrontation--with dire results.

Dubus tells his tragic tale from the viewpoints of the two main adversaries, Behrani and Kathy. To both of them, the house represents something more than just a place to live. For the colonel, it is a foot in the door of the American dream; for Kathy, a reminder of a kinder, gentler past. In prose that is simple yet evocative, House of Sand and Fog builds to its inevitable denouement, one that is painfully dark but unfailingly honest. --Alix Wilber

Product Description
"Elegant and powerful...an unusual and volatile...literary thriller." --Washington Post Book World


In this riveting novel of almost unbearable suspense, three fragile yet determined people become dangerously entangled in a relentlessly escalating crisis. Colonel Behrani, once a wealthy man in Iran, is now a struggling immigrant willing to bet everything he has to restore his family's dignity. Kathy Niccolo is a recovering alcoholic and addict whose house is all she has left, and who refuses to let her hard-won stability slip away from her. Sheriff Lester Burdon, a married man who finds himself falling in love with Kathy, becomes obsessed with helping her fight for justice.

Drawn by their competing desires to the same small house in the California hills--and what it represents to each of them--and doomed by their tragic inability to understand one another, the three converge on an explosive collision course. Combining unadorned realism with profound empathy, House of Sand and Fog is a devastating exploration of the American Dream gone awry.



Customer Reviews:   Read 744 more reviews...

2 out of 5 stars a tragedy that dribbled away to inconsequence   January 6, 2009
Gordon L. Fuglie
Dubus came up with an unusual and intriguing premise for his novel: A bureaucratic error over the ownership of a house in down-market (!) San Francisco that leads to its being contested by two protagonists. The house's newest "owner" is a dignity-hewing, appearance-maintaining former colonel in the Shah of Iran's (since deposed) air force groping for the first rung on the ladder of the American dream. His place in the narrative is enriched by his Persian family relationships: his wife Nadi and 14 year-old Americanized son Ismail.

The colonel is pitted against the real owner of the house, Kathy Nicolo, mistakenly evicted by the county from the home she inherited from her father. She has addiction issues, lacks moorings, and is the sort of unrealistic blue-collar girl that unerringly picks sexy but unintelligent and irresponsible guys who leave.

Well and good - a conflict set up between a disciplined patriarchal ex-military man with a bruised sense of honor in his Persian-American community, and an undisciplined, depressed "heroine" floundering in isolation and inaction.

In a real literary tragedy, the house in dispute would become the third character, serving as a metaphor that balances and defines the relationship between the colonel and Kathy. In other words, the house would hold the protagonists in artistic tension, like the great white whale in Moby Dick, or the boat in John Casey's award-winning Spartina of 1989.

But Dubus never goes there and the house becomes just a place where the conflict deteriorates, devolving into a distracting, manipulative melodrama. Instead of a house potent with symbolic meaning, the reader instead gets, er ......... officer Lester Burden, he of the crooked mustache and sudden penchant for rescuing lost loser ladies. Literary troikas, where three characters are harnessed together by adroit plot making, can have narrative complexity and drive as its characters interweave in the story -- but first, the author needs to know something about his horses and harnesses, and second, should never saddle a protagonist with a moniker like Lester.

And it's not just the unfortunate name. This character -- a trainer of new police recruits who look up to him, makes some unbelievably bad judgement calls, causing the irreversible loss of his career and family. When Lester numbly concludes in his jail cell that his police career is over, this reader laughed out loud: no s__t, sherlock! After an exasperating, melodramatic showdown at the courthouse between Lester, the colonel and Ismail, and which goes terribly wrong, the rest of the book sputters along in a protracted anti-climax for several more pages. All of the tragic elements have drained away and Dubus's tale ends pointlessly.

I listened to the audio version. Dubus provides the male voices and does a decent job. His wife assumes the character of Kathy Nicolo but struggles to realize the hapless character created by her husband. I suspect the film was much better.



5 out of 5 stars a brave attempt at reading the immigrant psyche   December 3, 2008
Amol Patil (Milwaukee)
I loved the book.
Did drag for the last 75 pages and then picked up again.
Dumas touches the immigrant psyche: and I appreciate that.You come to new culture but it takes a while for you to grow roots. In the meanwhile, you 'live out of suitcase'. You don't really belong to a specfic place but the US is your 'home'. Its hard to define, but a lot of the educated immigrants who arrive here are already living the US way of life; we work hard, pay our taxes,educate out children, live a clean life, are law abiding and expect everyone to be so. Its a self selected population of people who decide to immigrate to their 'Utopia'.
But, once in a while, you get let down.
Homeless people on the street corners, inefficent govt workers and the common crook may make you have doubts about your new home. Fortunately the US is much more deeper and stronger that that.
great book for a new comer to this country and especially so for people who still carry some 'baggage' from their previous cultures.
5 stars.



3 out of 5 stars Apathy.   November 29, 2008
Brian Lange (Chicago, IL)
The story is told primarily from two different people's points of view. I am not sure if the author intended the readers to feel any sympathy towards the characters in their predicaments, but I found all of them to be pretty despicable, and I thought they all probably deserve what's coming to them. At times I subconsciously root for one character or the next, but both of the main characters are greedy and selfish. Kathy is a screw up and incompetent which leads to all the trouble she gets in. Behrani is egotistical, stubborn and cares mostly about himself, imposing his own ideas of what is "best" for his family.

It is interesting hearing it from two different points of view, separated by different chapters, but I also feel like he stereotyped both characters a great deal. Using strategically broken english and an overbearing sense of pride through Behrani's words, and perhaps the exact opposite for Kathy.

Often this book is a perfect page-turner, but just as often I found myself wanting to skip over chunks and chunks of paragraph. What makes this book great is the gripping story and eerie building of suspense. You might suspect what is going to happen next, but you definitely do feel the need to keep reading. Where the book is weakest, I feel, is the pacing. Several points throughout the book the author will pause in the midst of a character's thoughts and dive into a flashback that can last up to three pages. And all of these flashbacks provide little more insight into the character... instead it seems like wasted words and space, and like I said, destroys the pacing. The climatic scene happens well before the end of the book, making the remaining pages very uninteresting and the ending is pretty unsatisfying.

Overall, a depressing but fairly well written book with a great story.



2 out of 5 stars Flawed Characters   August 18, 2008
Linda Busby Parker (Alabama)
0 out of 1 found this review helpful

Structurally, the book was interesting. Several characters narrate the book, and the plot unfolds around a central issue--who owns a particular house. Who can live in the house? Who can sell the house? But, the major problem is that the characters are difficult to identify with or find sympathy for. All three of the central characters--Kathy Nicolo, Lester Burdon, and Colonel Behrani--remain the same. They are never changed by incredible circumstances--death, murder, suicide, inprisonment--they remain the same. Kathy has a chip on her shoulders that's never explained and Lester is just plain stupid. What motivates these characters? The reader never knows. Kathy gets herself into trouble blindly and so does Lester. The reader is left wondering how these two are bungling through life. Surely, every human has some kind of thought process that at least partially puts the world into focus--but Kathy and Lester never do. Even in jail, both Kathy and Lester are still thinking about sex with each other. Well, their worlds have fallen in on them and there is no opening in sight, and they are still thinking of a little sex. Unbelievable! Where is the introspection? When Kathy's relatives show up at the jail, she still has a chip on her shoulder. Why? What's happened between them? The writer's job is to give us some insights into human relationships. The insights are missing here. Colonel Behrani is a little easier to understand. He's outside his primary culture. He operates with a different world view than most of us, and thus we cut him some space. But even he doesn't change. His last coherent thought is that his daughter should sell the house for a certain amount. That's why the book ultimately seems flawed to me--the characters are unbelievable, unlikable, and ultimately are boring. I also agree with the reviewer who said the book is not for kids. I know there is an audio version for kids (unabridged)--but this book is definitely not for kids. The sex is raw, the drug additions exposed, the blind and stupid behavior accepted. I don't think this book will be much discussed in a decade.

Avid Reader



1 out of 5 stars * NOT For KIDS !!! *   August 11, 2008
Lisa (Cape Cod, MA)
1 out of 4 found this review helpful

I gave this book 1 star, only because the review requires at least 1 star. This book was given to my 14 year old son to read for a High Honors required summer reading program. He read through the first 2 chapters and handed the book to me and said he wasn't going to read it. My husband and I then read the book and discovered extreme graphic sexual content, not just once, but, many, many times! The description of the sexual content is not done in a metaphorical way, it is exremeley graphic! I'm totally disgusted and appalled that not only did a teacher choose this book, but that it was approved by the Director of Curriculum! PARENTS BEWARE!!!

Powered by Associate-O-Matic

MoreTravel.info