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C**P
The Yellow House is so much more than a memoir.
This is more than the story of a life. More than the story of a family. More than the story of the ravaged wake of hurricane Katrina. And, much more than a house itself. This is Sarah M. Broom’s powerful memoir THE YELLOW HOUSE. As you read her flowing thoughts, you will discover not only her intimate relationship with a structure that held her family and friends together but what it came to symbolize to her and her family after it was laid waste post natural disaster. Once tethered to the ground that sustained them, Broom investigated, through extensive research and by interviewing members of her family, what the Yellow house stood for both literally and figuratively.More than a memoir. A document of place and time. A look at a neglected population in a city torn apart. An historical look at New Orleans East. No longer overlooked as Broom has carefully, tenderly put it on a map.What a pleasure it is to get to know the members of the Webb and Broom family through this book. Their strength, humor, and love for one another, are a testament to what holds us up and what keeps us up long after the beams come down. If only we could all have neighbors like them.
A**R
Sometimes gorgeous, sometimes slow going
Sarah Broom is, or was, a journalist, and that writing style is apparent in the way she has constructed this narrative, like a house painstakingly built, from the bottom up. She goes into long and exacting detail about her family and their place in New Orleans East, to give the reader context. It's dry going, as a way of beginning, and I'm not convinced she needed so much personal detail. But there are gorgeous moments, truly stunning writing, and at about the halfway point, when the Water comes, when there is less of that journalistic reportage and the story gets far more emotional and urgent, her book is very hard to put down. Sarah Broom is a beautiful writer. There is majesty in this book at its best.
R**R
Way too much detail
Knowing the author was a journalist first sheds light on why all of the intimate details of this book are captured. You wade through some of it, then get to the point of “Who Cares”? And speed read a few chapters. There wasn’t much that I liked about the book at all. I give her credit for tackling this topic.
A**E
Well written and compelling.
It’s an excellent mix of family history, Katrina reporting and compelling memoir. The best book I’ve read about family and place for a long time. Has a lingering impression. The kind of book I’d reread.
A**R
Authentic American experience
I particularly enjoyed Sarah’s love of family and exploring how the family handled the trauma of Katrina. Everyone in the book are such characters, ordinary people making way in the world in distinctive ways. Read this if you want to explore the African American experience, growing up in poverty, the modern day South, and especially if you find families and heritage fascinating
S**N
One of the best memoirs I’ve read, ever
Brilliantly written and brutally honest. Just fantastic, the rare memoir that’s actually a page turner. Can’t have been easy for the author to reveal so much about her family. Felt so real and true.
K**Y
Excellent
This was a very interesting book. I knew nothing about east New Orleans before reading this but after I feel like I have visited the area several times. She did a wonderful job describing her family and tying everything back to her childhood home. Her experiences are fascinating and her family stories will have you laughing or on the edge of tears. I really enjoyed reading this book and can't stop talking about it!
T**S
Library Loaner - Not One for your Collection
Someone chose this for our book club and EVERYONE was disappointed. I broke down and purchased it because it was so popular that I could not find it at the library; worst decision ever.While the book had a lot of potential, it seemed to only brush over all the various issues/experiences presented. Her presentation of various family members left me wishing she had a visual family tree included in the book.She jumped over certain timeframes with no transition; and did not connect certain parts of the story.It seemed like she wrote her short for a magazine and someone told her: "You should write a book." This was more journaling than actual story telling and was a thumbs down for me.I will never trust awarded books/publicized lists as a result of the accolades this book recieved.
S**L
Wow
Intense. Intimate. This storytelling reaches out from its pages and grips the reader with a powerful tale of family, place, and history.