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The Turner House - by Angela Flournoy (Paperback)

The Turner House - by  Angela Flournoy (Paperback)
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<p/><br></br><p><b> About the Book </b></p></br></br>A novel centered on the journey of the Turner family and its thirteen siblings, particularly the eldest and youngest, as they face the ghosts of their pasts--both an actual haint and the specter of addiction--the imminent loss of their mother, and the necessary abandonment of their family home in struggling Detroit<p/><br></br><p><b> Book Synopsis </b></p></br></br>"Flournoy's knockout debut is one of those books that should, by rights, be described as the Great American Novel." -- NPR <br><b>A <i>New York Times</i> Notable Book</b> <p/><b>Named a Best Book of the Year by</b><i>O, The Oprah Magazine</i> * <i>Entertainment Weekly</i> * NPR * <i>Essence</i> * <i>Men's Journal</i> * <i>Buzzfeed </i>* Bustle * <i>Time Out</i> * <i>Denver Post</i> * <i>Publishers Weekly</i> * <i>Kirkus Reviews</i> * <i>BookPage</i> * <i>Literary Hub * Kobo</i> * <i>The Week</i> <p/> "A page-turner. Richly wrought prose and intimate, vivid dialogue. A-." -- <i>Entertainment Weekly</i> <p/> For over fifty years the Turners have lived on Yarrow Street. Their house has seen thirteen children get grown and gone--and some return; it has seen the arrival of grandchildren, the fall of Detroit's East Side, and the loss of a father. But when their powerful mother falls ill, the Turners are called home to decide their house's fate and to reckon with how their past haunts--and shapes--their future. <i>The Turner House</i> is a striking examination of the price we pay for our dreams, and the ways in which our families bring us home. <p/> "An epic that feels deeply personal . . . Flournoy's finely tuned empathy infuses her characters with a radiant humanity." -- <i>O, The Oprah Magazine</i> <p/> "In this assured and memorable novel, [Flournoy] provides the feeling of knowing a family from the inside out, as we would wish to know our own." -- <i>New York Times Book Review</i><p/><br></br><p><b> From the Back Cover </b></p></br></br>Utterly moving and tough as nails, <i>The Turner House</i>is a love story as immense as the family it describes, and as complicated as the city that made them. A clear-sighted ode to the bonds that make and break us, to resilience across generations, to shared joys and solitary struggles, Flournoy s debut is as fresh and bold as they come.Commanding and unputdownable! Ayana Mathis<br /><br /> Flournoy is a magician here is a story that is charming and funny while being whip-smart and profound. Laced through are the hard facts of history and the mysterious workings of the human heart. This is a thrilling debut. Tayari Jones<br /><br /> An expansive and ambitious novel that descends through the generations of one family s history to achieve real poignancy and power. T. C. Boyle<br /> <br /> <i>The Turner House</i> is masterful: full of history and lies and the myths that can bring a family together, or tear it apart. This is a beautiful, elegant, and living novel, one that you will savor until the last, moving paragraph. Daniel Alarcon<br /> <br /> As compelling, unforgettable, and beautifully told a story as I ve read in ages. While each of the thirteen siblings (and their parents) could carry a book on his or her own, here they remain indelibly linked by the complicated bonds of history and belonging and by the promises of their heartbreak city, Detroit. Cristina Garcia<br /><br /> This book is so beautifully written, so perfectly observed and heard it s about aging and parenthood and above all that misunderstood lifelong union, siblinghood but it s also pure pleasure to read: funny, heartbreaking, with the sort of characters you ll miss like family when you finish. Elizabeth McCracken"<p/><br></br><p><b> Review Quotes </b></p></br></br><br><b>National Book Award Finalist <br> Nominated for the NAACP Image Awards, "Outstanding Literary Work - Debut Author" <br> Short-listed for the PEN/Robert W. Bingham Prize for Debut Fiction <br> Nominated for the Hurston/Wright Legacy Awards, Fiction <br> One of the National Book Foundation's "5 Under 35" <br> Short-listed for the 2015 Center for Fiction First Novel Prize <br> Finalist for the 2016 New York Public Library Young Lions Award <br> Winner of the 2016 Paterson Fiction Prize <br> Finalist for the VCU Cabell First Novelist ​Award</b> <br><b>Short-listed for the Ernest Gaines Award </b> <br><b>Short-listed for The Morning News 2016 Tournament of Books</b> <br><b>Long-listed for the NBCC John Leonard Prize for A Debut Novel</b> <br><b>Long-listed for the 2016 Chautauqua Prize <br> ​Nominated for the International Dublin Literary Award 2017</b> <br><b>An Amazon Top 100 Editors' Pick of the Year</b> <br><b>A <i>New York Times</i> Notable Book of 2015</b> <br><b>A<i> New York Times</i> Editors' Choice <br><i>New York Times</i> Paperback Row</b> <br><b>Short-listed for the Winter 2015 Lariat List <br> Short-listed for the Medici Book Club Prize</b> <br><b>A Michigan Notable Book 2016</b> <br><b>Black Caucus of the ALA--1st Novelist Award Winner</b> <br><b>Finalist for the 2016 Indies Choice Awards</b> <br><b>One of <i>O, The Oprah Magazine</i>'s "10 Favorite Books of the Year"</b> <br><b>One of <i>Entertainment Weekly</i>'s "10 Best Books of 2015"</b> <br><b>An NPR "Best Book of 2015"</b> <br><b>One of Buzzfeed's "The 24 Best Fiction Books of 2015"</b> <br><b>One of Bustle's "2015's 25 Best Books, Fiction Edition"</b> <br><b>A <i>Publishers Weekly</i> "Best Book of 2015"</b> <br><b>A <i>Kirkus</i> "Best Fiction Books of 2015"</b> <br><b>An <i>Essence</i>'s "Best Books of 2015"</b> <br><b>A <i>Time Out </i>New York "Best Book of 2015"</b> <br><b>A <i>Detroit Free Press</i> "Must-read novel of 2015"</b> <br><b>A Literary Hub "Best Book of 2015"</b> <br><b>One of <i>Men's Journal'</i>s "The 35 Best Books of 2015" <br> One of the <i>The Week</i>'s "Best Fiction Books of 2015" <br> A <i>Denver Post</i> "Best Fiction Book of 2015"</b> <br><b>One of BookPage's "Best Books of 2015"</b> <br><b>A Kobo.com "Must-Read Fiction Debut of 2015"</b> <br><b>BAM Top Pick for Spring 2015</b> <br><b>May 2015 Indie Next Title</b> <br><b>One of Literati Bookstore's "Best Books of 2015"</b> <br><b><i>Morning Sun</i> Bestseller</b> <p/> "An engrossing and remarkably mature first novel...Flournoy's prose is artful without being showy. She takes the time to flesh out the world...In her accretion of resonant details, Flournoy recounts the history of Detroit with more sensitivity than any textbook could...Flournoy gets at the universal through the patient observation of one family's particulars. In this assured and memorable novel, she provides the feeling of knowing a family from the inside out, as we would wish to know our own."--<i>New York Times Book Review</i>, Editors' Choice <p/><i>"The Turner House</i> speeds along like a page-turner. Flournoy's richly wrought prose and intimate, vivid dialogue make this novel feel like settling deeply into the family armchair."--<i>Entertainment Weekly</i> (Grade: A-) <p/> "Flournoy has written an epic that feels deeply personal...Flournoy's finely tuned empathy infuses her characters with a radiant humanity."--<i>O, The Oprah Magazine</i> <p/> "Angela Flournoy's knockout debut is one of those books that should, by rights, be described as the Great American Novel, as it hits all the points of American life: family, real estate, money, ghosts and loss. Set mostly in Detroit during the financial crisis of 2008, the book tells the story of the 13 adult children of Francis and Viola Turner, who must decide what to do with their family house. The characters are fascinating and funny, and anyone who has played a role in the ecosystem of his family life will recognize the joys and challenges that plague the Turners. But perhaps the strongest character is Detroit itself, as it morphs from bustling modern metropolis to a potent symbol of post-industrial decline."--NPR, "Our Guide to 2015's Great Reads" <p/> "When a made-up family feels as warmly real as the Turners -- Francis, Viola, and their 13 children -- your heart takes note. And when that perceptive, generation-spanning work turns out to be a debut, so does the National Book Award committee, which short-listed Flournoy's beautifully written novel for its fiction prize. Whether you're sitting in oldest son Cha-Cha's therapy sessions, praying for Lelah to overcome her roulette addiction, or following the years young Francis and Viola spent apart, by the time you reach the book's end, you'll almost feel like a Turner yourself."--<i>Entertainment Weekly</i>, "10 Best Books of 2015" <p/> "An elegant and assured debut."--<i>The Washington Post</i> <p/> "Poignant and timely."--<i>San Francisco Chronicle</i> <p/><i>"</i>Flournoy's National Book Award-nominated debut does an incredible job of bringing both a family and a city to vibrant, poignant life."--Buzzfeed, "The 24 Best Fiction Books of 2015" <p/> "A sprawling family history that delves into the Detroit housing crisis and the potential legacies the past holds, Angela Flournoy's first novel will be remembered as the start of a brilliant career."--Bustle, "2015's 25 Best Books, Fiction Edition" <p/> "Epic, ambitious and strikingly executed, <i>The Turner House </i>is an impressive debut novel. In the grand tradition of family dramas by the late Bebe Moore Campbell, it is lively and entertaining, with subtle humor and engaging voice. Flournoy manages the difficult feat of skillfully telling the stories of 13 children, their parents and accompanying spouses and love interests in an irresistible style. Here we have a deeply satisfying portrayal of relationships among those to whom we, for better or worse, are related by blood."--The Root <p/> "Nobody can take you from joyful to infuriated as fast as your brother or sister. Similarly, the ups and downs of the 13 siblings that populate <i>The Turner House</i>, the first novel by Angela Flournoy, whip from laugh-out-loud to heart-crushing. Still, she proves even bonds that have stretched a mile long have the ability to snap back."--<i>Essence Magazine</i> <p/> "With <i>The Turner House</i>, Flournoy has written an utterly unsentimental love story that, rather like the house on Yarrow Street, manages to make room for everyone."--<i>Christian Science Monitor</i> <p/> "A fierce and tender debut novel...Angela Flournoy is the literary anthropologist of Detroit, not so different from the way a young Philip Roth was the literary anthropologist of Newark."--Paterson Fiction Prize Citation <p/> "As a hate-to-admit-it only child, I have always been fascinated by siblings, and <i>The Turner House</i> artfully sketches no less than 13 of them--plus matriarch, patriarch, grandchildren <i>and</i> a handful of supporting characters. Beyond this character balancing act, Angela Flournoy's novel is also an impressive work of place, illuminating not only the eponymous house, but also the larger city of Detroit, from the Great Migration through white flight and early gentrification."--Literary Hub, "Best Books of 2015" <p/> "Beautifully moving...This book is deeply personal but also clearly representative of one American city's hope in the face of tragedy."--<i>BUST</i> <p/> "[The] dynamite Detroit debut...<i>The Turner House</i> belongs on the shelf with the very finest books about one of America's most dynamic, tortured, and resilient cities...There are cracklingly alive scenes inside pawn shops and factories, casinos and living rooms. Flournoy has a deft touch with the verbal and psychological sparring between spouses, siblings, and parents and children...One of Flournoy's great achievements is that she doesn't draw attention to the fact that virtually every one of her characters is black. This is just part of the novel's oxygen and furniture, a Detroit given. Therein lies its quiet strength...Angela Flournoy is an exciting new talent whose debut has enriched Detroit's flowering literature. Read <i>The Turner House</i>, and I'm sure you'll join me in waiting, eagerly, to see what its gifted author comes up with next."--The Millions <p/> "A masterly domestic drama...Flournoy has a talent for universalising experience from well-observed particulars, and this tale of a black family haunted (literally) by the past and each other is enlivened by perceptive and musical prose."--<i>Sydney Morning Herald</i> <p/> "Detroit is a city often portrayed as past rescue, irrevocably blighted. But Flournoy's debut novel retrieves it from this through vivid details and equally vivid characters."--<i>Time Out</i> New York, "Best Books of 2015" <p/> "Sensitively and powerfully, [Flournoy] tells the story of the Turners of Yarrow Street, the 13 children they raised and their east Detroit neighborhood that's hit hard by the city's economic troubles. Jumping back and forth across 50 years of challenges and change, love and loss, ties that bind and memories that haunt, Flournoy creates a vivid portrait of fictional characters in a real city. This is essential reading."--<i>Detroit Free Press</i>, "<i>The Turner House</i> is a must-read novel of 2015" <p/> "<i>The Turner House</i> [is] not only a first novel but a lamentation for and a paean to Detroit, from the mid-1940s to the present day, a funny yet heart-wrenching book, both beautiful and revealing of all the ways close human beings relate to one another (and to places and things) over time."--<i>The Buffalo News</i><p>"With the matriarch of a family of 13 siblings in failing health, those who remain close enough to their empty childhood home -- in a nearly abandoned East Side Detroit neighborhood -- must hash out what to do with the house. Between nostalgia, fraud, secrets and an old ghost, there are as many competing, confounding, unappealing ways forward for the Turners as for their city."--<i>Denver Post</i>, "Best Fiction Books of 2015"</p>"It's hard to believe that this moving, beautifully written novel is a debut. In <i>The Turner House, </i> Flournoy tells the story of a large family in Detroit trying to figure out what to do with their childhood home, which has depreciated in value because of urban decay."--<i>Men's Journal</i>, "The 35 Best Books of 2015" <p/> "A thoroughly engrossing saga. Flournoy is adept at conveying the sense that it is with our families where we can most be ourselves."--Rob Kirby<i>, Rain Taxi</i> <p/> "A tale of a city and family in flux, <i>The Turner House</i> is a gripping, nuanced reading, heralding the arrival of a major talent...[It] is reminiscent of other family/city sagas: Jonathan Franzen's <i>The Corrections</i>, Jane Smiley's <i>Some Luck</i>, the [Jeffrey Eugenides's] <i>Middlesex</i>, all stories of places and their inhabitants. Even if all you know of Woodward Avenue comes courtesy of Bob Seger, even if <i>8 Mile</i> is only a movie title to you, do yourself a favor and read <i>The Turner House</i>. Once you open its pages, you won't be able to put it down."--<i>PopMatters</i> <p/> "A lively, thoroughly engaging family saga with a cast of fully realized characters...[Flournoy] handles time and place with a veteran's ease...She puts her own distinctive stamp on this absorbing narrative."--<i>Publisher's Weekly</i>, starred and boxed review <p/> "Encompassing a multitude of themes, including aging and parenthood, this is a compelling read that is funny and moving in equal measure."--<i>Booklist, </i>starred review <p/> "Flournoy's writing is precise and sharp...the novel draws readers to the Turner family almost magnetically. A talent to watch."--<i>Kirkus</i> <p/> "What makes The Turner House profound is its reality, its observation of a family so diverse and well-drawn that they seem real. . . We rarely find such an honest portrait of what it means to be a sibling--defined by your differences as much as your similarities--as the one Flournoy gives us."--<i>BookPage </i> <p/> "What is rarer, and much more difficult, in a story is to involve numerous family members as point-of-view characters. Faulkner set the standard with <i>As I Lay Dying</i>, and contemporary incarnations like <i>A Visit from the Goon Squad</i> by Jennifer Egan and <i>The Middlesteins</i> by Jami Attenberg have run the spectrum. This is exactly the challenge that Angela Flournoy takes on in her debut novel <i>The Turner House</i>, with admirable success...<i>The Turner House</i> is a wonderfully crafted glimpse into the intimacy of family, and shows immense promise for Flournoy."--<i>Bustle</i> <p/> "One of the many strengths of this book -- entertaining, well-written and keenly insightful without calling attention to itself -- is its clear-eyed, unsentimental vision. Flournoy never ignores the problems afflicting family and place -- a 13-child clan and Detroit -- even as she pays homage to both."--<i>Milwaukee Journal Sentinel</i> <p/> "Utterly moving and tough as nails, <i>The Turner House</i> is a love story as immense as the family it describes, and as complicated as the city that made them. A clear-sighted ode to the bonds that make and break us, to resilience across generations, to shared joys and solitary struggles, Flournoy's debut is as fresh and bold as they come. Commanding and un-putdownable!"--Ayana Mathis, bestselling author of <i>The Twelve Tribes of Hattie</i> <p/> "An expansive and ambitious novel that descends through the generations of one family's history to achieve real poignancy and power." --T.C. Boyle, bestselling author of <i>San Miguel</i>, <i>The Women</i>, and many others <p/> "<i>The Turner House</i> is a marvelous novel introducing a family of irresistible characters. Angela Flournoy is a magician--here is a story that is charming and funny while being whip-smart and profound. Laced through are the hard facts of history and the mysterious workings of the human heart. The magic begins with the extraordinary first chapter and lasts to the very last page. This is a thrilling debut from a writer to watch."--Tayari Jones, author of <i>Silver Sparrow</i> and others <p/> "Angela Flournoy's extraordinary debut novel, <i>The Turner House</i>, is as compelling, unforgettable, and beautifully told a story as I've read in ages. The real and the supernatural, the hardships and hard won triumphs of the tightly knit, at times warring Turner clan will pull you close to this family's generous, dignified heart. While each of the thirteen siblings (and their parents) could carry a book on his or her own, here they remain indelibly linked by the complicated bonds of history and belonging--and by the promises of their heartbreak city, Detroit."--Cristina Garcia, author of <i>Dreaming in Cuban</i>, <i>King of Cuba, </i>and others <p/> "Angela Flournoy's <i>The Turner House</i> is masterful: a novel full of history and lies and the myths that can bring a family together, or tear it apart. There are touches of grace and humor in this generous and humane portrait of a family, and a city, in transition. This is a beautiful, elegant, and living novel, one that you will savor until the last, moving paragraph." --Daniel Alarcón, author of <i>At Night We Walk in Circles</i> <p/> "Angela Flournoy's brilliant <i>The Turner House </i>is about no less than the joy and aggravation of being a human being in a large family, in a house, in a city, on this earth. This book is so beautifully written, so perfectly observed and heard--it's about aging and parenthood and above all that misunderstood lifelong union, siblinghood--but it's also pure pleasure to read: funny, heartbreaking, with the sort of characters you'll miss like family when you finish. <i>The Turner House </i>is an absolutely wonderful novel."--Elizabeth McCracken, author of <i>The Giant's House</i>, <i>Thunderstruck</i>, and others<br><p/><br></br><p><b> About the Author </b></p></br></br><p>ANGELA FLOURNOY is a graduate of the Iowa Writers' Workshop and the University of Southern California. She has taught writing at various universities and has worked for the D.C. Public Library. She was raised in Southern California by a mother from Los Angeles and a father from Detroit.</p>

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