BookDigger.com Home
Home & Garden Books Alex Anderson
Animal Care
Antique Art
Antique books
Antique Clocks
Antique Diecast
Antique Homes
Antique Kitchenware
Antique Pez
Antique Pottery
Antique Rugs
Antiques
Bob Vila
Buildings
Carolyne Roehm
Collectibles
Cottages
Crafts
Cross Stitch
Debbie Bliss
Debbie Travis
Design
Donald Kaufmann
Dried Flowers
Exterior Design
Fashion
Flowers
Garden Design
Garden Furnishings
Gardening
Georgia Bonesteel
Greenhouses
Herbs
Home Design
Home Improvements
Horticulture
House Plans
House Plants
Hydroponics
Indoor
Interior Design
Japanese Gardens
Jeff Cox
Jerry Baker
Jinny Beyer
Katrin Cargill
Knitting
Landscape
Lawns
Martha Stewart
Mary Emmerling
Mary Engelbreit
Monks of New Skete
Nancy Zieman
Norm Abram
Organic
Ponds
Potpourri
Pottery
Rachel Ashwell
Rayford Reddell
Remodeling
Renovation
Ribbons
Rugs
Sandra Betzina
Sewing
Stenciling
Terence Conran
Tricia Guild
Water Gardens
Weaving
Woodworking
Xeriscaping

All Home & Garden
View Cart | Help

Renovations


Home > Home and Garden Books > Renovation > Item 12


Previous Renovation Book Next Renovation Book

Click here to buy Renovations by  John Marchese. Renovations
by John Marchese
Sales Rank: 380754
0.0 out of 5 stars
$0.92
At Amazon
on 10-13-2008
Buy Renovations Now!

  • Paperback: 256 pages
  • Publisher: Riverhead Trade May 7, 2002
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1573229318
  • ISBN-13: 978-1573229319
  • Product Dimensions: 8.1 x 5.1 x 0.7 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 7.4 ounces

    From Publishers Weekly
    Call it a midlife crisis: Marchese didn't know how to use a hammer when, at 40, he bought a one-and-a-half-story Cape Cod fixer-upper in rural New York to tear it apart and rebuild it. In an attempt also to repair a broken relationship, Marchese (a sophisticated, urban-dwelling freelance journalist) asked his cranky, 73-year-old father (an opinionated, second-generation Italian immigrant and former construction worker) to help him. While several passages detail the intricacies of installing a dormer or erecting scaffolding, the book is far more fun than a standard how-to book. Marchese's humor and self-deprecation, as well as his frank and candid portrayals of his father (who at first laughed out loud when the author donned a tool belt), capture certain essentials about being a father and a son. Marchese mentions his work attire: "It's my latest costume. I am wearing nearly three hundred dollars' worth of old clothes. For some reason, I can't resist mentioning this to my father." He also portrays the smalltown life he's come to love with sensitive whimsy, introducing readers to Bob the plumber, Miss Mary the bartender, a bully named Lurch and Reiger the Realtor. He even throws a few barbs at TV's home improvement pioneer, Bob Vila, whom the author interviewed for a New York Times assignment. Marchese sprinkles references throughout to other authors who focused on father-son relationships in their writing: Nietzsche, Arthur Miller, Philip Roth and especially John Cheever. Replete with expressive passages, Marchese's tale will please readers of many ages and stations. (May 7)Forecast: Though due out in May, this title (whose first serial will appear in Book magazine) will easily register on the radar of sons looking for June Father's Day gifts.

    Copyright 2001 Cahners Business Information, Inc.

    --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

    From Library Journal
    Men, it is said, love to take things apart; the tricky part is putting them back together again. In both of these memoirs, the authors successfully disassemble and rebuild their relationships with their fathers. Kemp's memoir is a brief but beautiful love letter to his deceased pops. Winner of the 1999 Writer's Digest National Self-Published Book contest's Grand Prize, this work recalls the author's meaningful connections (e.g., "I had the best go-cart in the world and[he] built it for me") and chronicles parts of his dad's life. Writing in a frankly inspirational style, Kemp, a Salt Lake City-based attorney, focuses on what his father taught him about life's big lessons. Marchese, a freelance writer, takes a more workman-like approach. He deconstructs the complex relationship that he shares with his former construction-worker father and presents it as clearly as a blueprint. Their fizzled relationship is rekindled when the two renovate a house in Narrowsburg, NY. It helps that Dad has a lifetime's experience, because Marchese doesn't even know which end of a pry-bar to use. An epiphany near the end of Marchese's book speaks to everyone: "Like all sons, I am what I am both because of [my father] and despite him."Although there is much accumulated wisdom in both books, libraries might prefer Marchese's literate and forthright account, although Kemp's more idealized account will work well where inspirational titles for men are needed. Libraries might also consider Ted Solotaroff's Truth Comes in Blows (LJ 11/1/98) and Hugh Howard's House-Dreams (LJ 5/15/01). Appropriate for Father's Day gifts and for public libraries. Douglas C. Lord, Hartford P.L., CT
    Copyright 2001 Reed Business Information, Inc. --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

  • Renovations
    Available from Amazon
    Price: $0.92
    Updated on 10-13-2008

    Buy Renovations Now!


    Previous Renovation Book Next Renovation Book


    Search For Products:

    Powered by Arc Spider - Smart Shopping Search Engine   
    Privacy Statement

    Search:
    Keywords:
    In Association with Amazon.com


    NOTICE: All product prices, availability, and specifications
    are subject to verification by their respective retailers.


    Copyright © 2008 Dominant Systems Corporation
    info@bookdigger.com         Privacy Policy
    Last Modified : 10-13-2008