The Goonies (1985)
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Making House features the houses and apartments of leading interior, furniture, and product...
Dream Decor: Styling a Cool, Creative and Comfortable Home, Wherever You Live
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The New Old House: Historic & Modern Architecture Combined
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Old House, New Life presents 18 private historic homes, from North America to Europe, and traces the...
Bright Young Things: London
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Brooke de Ocampo invites us back into the homes of Bright Young Things, only this time she opens the...
SQM the Quantified Home
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The way we live is rapidly changing under pressure from multiple forces - financial, environmental,...
Rooms to Inspire by the Sea
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An unprecedented tour of breathtaking beach community and waterfront properties in idyllic settings...
Alison Pink (7 KP) rated Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close in Books
Jan 15, 2018
Jonathan Safran Foer's book gave me that personal connection. While I know it is fiction, it felt SO incredibly real. His writing was very heartfelt...funny, depressing, hopeful, and heartbreaking all at once. It tells the story of Oskar Schell who lost his father on that horrible day. It tells the tale of the aftermath for those left behind, those who still today stuggle to get a handle on wrapping their minds around their loved one being gone, even though there is nothing to put closure to their loss.
Oskar spends months a searching for an explanation to a key he found at the bottom of a vase in his father's closet after he died. He embarks on the search hoping to feel close to his dad, if only for a little while longer. That search leads him all through New York and into the homes of a very eclectic group of people who are all dealing with some kind of tragedy. In the end, what he finds surprises Oskar, but also manages to pull him back to his mother and deal with his anger at the same time.
I'm not sure what I was expecting, but this book was a pleasant surprise. I laughed & cried, often times all from just one page of text. The story is accompanied by photos that just add to the personal nature of the story. I don't do this often if ever really, but I think this is a book I will read more than once.