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House Lust

America's Obsession with Our Homes

Audiobook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

What is it about the rustic beauty of hardwood floors or the luxury of natural stone countertops that turns ordinary people into covetous friends, competitive neighbors, and shameless snoops? In House Lust, Newsweek writer Daniel McGinn takes readers inside the homes---and the psyches---of people all over the country to discover what’s fueling the national fixation on where and how we live today.

If eyes are the windows to our souls, then our homes are the windows into our taste, our wallets, and, arguably, our very identities. Buying a house or apartment is a rite of passage, so it’s only natural that we spend a lot of time talking about our homes---and our neighbors’ homes. House Lust is filled with stories of what people are not talking about:

---The kitchen designer who in four years saw seven of her twenty clients’ marriages end in divorce

---The woman who took a sledgehammer to her kitchen while her husband was away on a fishing trip to motivate him to start remodeling

---“Zillowing”---using the Web site Zillow.com to find out how much your friends (and enemies) paid for their homes

In a narrative that blends comic social commentary with incisive reporting, McGinn proves what real estate agents have known all along: people are not just buying a house, they’re buying an identity. House Lust is an astute, funny, and sometimes disturbing portrait of contemporary America.

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    • AudioFile Magazine
      Daniel McGinn reflects on America's obsession with real estate--building enormous new houses, fixing up old ones (although the author argues that in this "post-handy world" our hands are only useful for writing checks to contractors), watching HGTV, and nosily looking up the price of our friends' houses on zillow.com. The author invests in a rental property in Pocatello, Idaho, which doesn't work out so well. One tenant goes to jail, the other drinks on the porch with his homeless friends, and the property manager disappears with the rent money. David Drummond's well-modulated no-nonsense tone is a pleasure. His timing is impeccable, especially in delivering the author's frequent use of humor, and he consistently differentiates the narrative from the dialogue. A.B. (c) AudioFile 2008, Portland, Maine
    • Publisher's Weekly

      October 8, 2007
      Despite the current downturn in the housing market, the country's “mania for homes” that exploded during the last half-decade is still alive and well, according to Newsweek
      writer McGinn. The fascination with homes—“talking about, valuing, scheming over, envying, shopping for, refinancing, or just plain ogling homes”—has continued even after the market has cooled, McGinn argues, and can be seen in the ongoing popularity of HGTV, the 24-7 real estate and home improvement cable channel and its flagship show, House Hunters
      . To prove his thesis, McGinn entertainingly explores the gamut of housing obsessions, from buying personally designed and oversized trophy homes, attempting large-scale renovations and spending “obscene” amounts of time on real estate Web sites such as Zillow and PropertyShark to actually going out and getting a real estate license, which McGinn himself does after only minimal training. It is this ability to get inside the actual lives of the housing-obsessed rather that relying purely on statistics to prove his point that makes this book as enjoyable as an episode of Flip This House
      , another popular housing reality show that McGinn cites in a book that is, at heart, all “about behavior, not economics.”

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  • English

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