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Biography & Autobiography Personal Memoirs

My Grandfather’s House

A Genealogy of Doubt and Faith

by (author) Robert Clark

Publisher
Picador
Initial publish date
Sep 2000
Category
Personal Memoirs, General, Religious
  • Paperback / softback

    ISBN
    9780312243142
    Publish Date
    Sep 2000
    List Price
    $19.00

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Description

Finalist, Los Angeles TimesBook Prize for Biography
In the tradition of Augustine’s Confessions, Robert Clark tells the story of his return to the Catholic Church through the prism of the religious history of his ancestors. Intertwining their experiences as Catholics in late-medieval England, as Puritan settlers in 17th Century New England, and as 19th Century New England transcendentalists with his childhood in an Episcopalian boarding school and later conversion to Roman Catholicism, Clark presents not only a memoir but a testament of faith.

About the author

ROBERT CLARK’s most recent novel, Love Among the Ruins, received excellent reviews and is under option for film development. He is also the author of Mr. White’s Confessions, winner of the Edgar Award for Best Novel and the PNBA Award, and In the Deep Midwinter, his first, also highly acclaimed, novel. In addition to writing extensively on travel, food and wine, Clark is the author of River of the West and My Grandfather’s House, a finalist for the Los Angeles Times Book Award for biography. Clark, presently a Guggenheim fellow, teaches fiction and non-fiction writing at universities, conferences and workshops. He lives in Seattle with his wife and children.

Robert Clark's profile page

Editorial Reviews

“To revive the confessio tradition at this moment in our cultural history is no small thing. But that is what Robert Clark has done in this beautiful, captivating memoir.”—George Weigel, The Washington Post
“In this rare work of personal narrative that truly achieves historical significance, Robert Clark’s family becomes our own. A fascinating work of history as well as a moving, and often hilarious, account of his own religious struggles, My Grandfather’s Houseimmediately presents itself as one of the rare American autobiographies that will endure.”—Patricia Hampl, author ofA Romantic Education
“For those not sure what to make of the God question, Clark has given us a rock-solid place... to start. Though we might find a different resolution from his, his search parallels our own: how to gain peace, where to find faith, and what to pass on to our children, who will face the same age-old questions in the new millennium.”—Mary Ann Gwinn,The Seattle Times
“This is an odd platypus of a book, a dreamlike hybrid stitched together from half a dozen literary species including autobiography, intellectual and social history, literary criticism and Sunday school sermon. Like a platypus, it is gawky and beautiful, cuddly and off-putting and curiously compelling.”—Philip Zaleski,The New York Times Book Review
“Elegantly written and historically informative, My Grandfather’s House is a fascinating, passionate, and inspiring spiritual autobiography.”—Ron Hansen, America
“An imaginative spiritual autobiography... The book is a true ‘genealogy’ in the sense that Clark traces many diverse religious manifestations through five centuries of his own family history.”—Kirkus Reviews

“To revive the confessio tradition at this moment in our cultural history is no small thing. But that is what Robert Clark has done in this beautiful, captivating memoir.”—George Weigel, The Washington Post
“In this rare work of personal narrative that truly achieves historical significance, Robert Clark’s family becomes our own. A fascinating work of history as well as a moving, and often hilarious, account of his own religious struggles, My Grandfather’s Houseimmediately presents itself as one of the rare American autobiographies that will endure.”—Patricia Hampl, author ofA Romantic Education
“For those not sure what to make of the God question, Clark has given us a rock-solid place... to start. Though we might find a different resolution from his, his search parallels our own: how to gain peace, where to find faith, and what to pass on to our children, who will face the same age-old questions in the new millennium.”—Mary Ann Gwinn,The Seattle Times
“This is an odd platypus of a book, a dreamlike hybrid stitched together from half a dozen literary species including autobiography, intellectual and social history, literary criticism and Sunday school sermon. Like a platypus, it is gawky and beautiful, cuddly and off-putting and curiously compelling.”—Philip Zaleski,The New York Times Book Review
“Elegantly written and historically informative, My Grandfather’s House is a fascinating, passionate, and inspiring spiritual autobiography.”—Ron Hansen, America
“An imaginative spiritual autobiography... The book is a true ‘genealogy’ in the sense that Clark traces many diverse religious manifestations through five centuries of his own family history.”—Kirkus Reviews

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