CD Shopper
Search Advanced SearchView Cart   Checkout   
 Location:  Home > Books > Memoirs > The Barn House: Confessions of an Urban Rehabber  
Categories
Music
DVD Movies
Video Games
Audio & Video
Books
Computers

The Barn House: Confessions of an Urban Rehabber

The Barn House: Confessions of an Urban Rehabber

zoom enlarge 
Author: Ed Zotti
Publisher: NAL Hardcover
Category: Book

List Price: $22.95
Buy New: $15.61
You Save: $7.34 (32%)



New (32) Used (15) from $2.95

Rating: 4.0 out of 5 stars 5 reviews
Sales Rank: 240227

Media: Hardcover
Number Of Items: 1
Pages: 384
Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.1
Dimensions (in): 8.3 x 5.7 x 1.3

ISBN: 0451225570
Dewey Decimal Number: 690.837
EAN: 9780451225573
ASIN: 0451225570

Publication Date: September 2, 2008
Shipping: Eligible for Super Saver Shipping
Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours

Similar Items:

  • Consider the Lobster: And Other Essays
  • Traffic: Why We Drive the Way We Do (and What It Says About Us)
  • The Scourge of God: A Novel of the Change (Change Series)
  • Indignation
  • Playing For Keeps

Editorial Reviews:

Product Description
A harrowing, hilarious memoir about fixing up an old house in the city and pursuing the urban version of the American Dream. From the longtime editor of the Straight Dope.

In 1993, after more people had fled Chicago for the suburbs than in any other city in America, Ed Zotti and his wife, Mary, chose not only to stay but to gamble their future fixing up a dilapidated Victorian home in a dicey neighborhood on Chicagos North Side.

Two doors up from a murder/arson scene and across the alley from a former drive- up drug mart, the Barn House (as the Zottis unimpressed daughter dubbed it) was a rehabbers nightmare. Ed and his family had to contend not just with collapsed ceilings and shorted-out wiring but burglars, gunshots, and the trumpet-playing homeless guy in the basement.

But THE BARN HOUSE is more than just the story of a home-renovation project from hell. Ultimately it's a celebration of cities, chronicling not just a house but a decaying town come back to life. Along the way Ed offers some shrewd observations about gentrification, urban decline and revival, and what it means to be a city guy. His book is timely and a great read and will appeal to anyone with a soft spot for old houses or old towns.



Customer Reviews:

5 out of 5 stars Fascinating, funny and helpful   November 25, 2008
At first glance, you'd think the Barn House would be another retelling of "Mr Blandings ..." or "The Money Pit", and sure, there are some aspects of those funny disaster stories here too. But this book goes far beyond that concept. It's more about Gentrification, aka Urban renewal. It also has a lot of heart in it's details about Ed's family and personal life. The author also goes into what he calls "The Brotherhood of the Right Way" which basicly separates craftsman from contractors.

As a bonus, the book adds some very practical tips about home wiring, well illustrated.

I suggest this book for:
Those who like autobiographical stories- mostly funny
Those who think they'd like to rehab a house (hint- find "The Brotherhood of the Right Way" and bring lots of moola)
and those who want to know more about how American cites are experiencing a rebirth.

Of course, coming from Cecil Adam'ss main writer and editor it's very easy to read and will have you chuckling over and over. I agree with the previous reviewer, however- the book needs more pictures.



4 out of 5 stars A story about a house, a city, a family and how we live   October 13, 2008
 1 out of 1 found this review helpful

Like "Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance," the title is just an introduction or backdrop to the bigger story. The "Barn House" is about rehabbing a house, but it's also about history (which I loved), architecture, a city, a neighborhood, a family, and the many characters - the cultures, personalities and perspectives - one gets to know and mix it up with(and sometimes to trust with everything dear in life) while delving into this kind of monstrously risky affair.

And, most articulately, it's about process, which really is all everything is about. Even if you've never rehabbed a house, you've been there, which is what makes this a truly enjoyable read for people like me who will never do it.

I don't have the patience to rehab anything. As soon as I start a project, my earlier goals and standards for the finished project shrink with my frustration and desire only to have it done. It doesn't mean I don't appreciate artistry and perfection; it just means that either my husband does it or I hire someone else who will do it Right. And I notice this and I admire the hell out of them for it.

I don't know nuthin 'bout wiring and I prefer to leave the fireworks to others; in fact I'll pay them more if they just tell me it's magic when it works. But this book drew me in, which is a real testament, because Ed Zotti does love and admire the details involved in wiring. I found myself wanting to know more about stuff that has never - and I daresay I hope never will - be useful to me. A good book is a pleasant escape from your reality, and it takes a good writer to make it so.

I could have done without the occasional corny gender stereotypes, but it's a personal account by an author who is candid about how he sees the world and we all have our limitations.

Two things I would like to see in the next edition:

1. Pictures. Artists' drawing and before and after photos. I often had to read a paragraph over again to try to picture what was being described. I wanted to refer to illustrations.

2. A glossary of terms. Many details were well explained for the layman and analogies were useful. But certain building/construction/architectural terms were thrown about that were useless to me. (Though I should admit that so were a lot of the adjectives and verbs, since my vocabulary just isn't that great.)

This would be a great housewarming gift, but read it before you decide who to give it to. Some people might not think some of this stuff is funny!



1 out of 5 stars A Stagnant Sence of Humor.   September 23, 2008
 0 out of 5 found this review helpful

Here comes Eddy an unusual and low-keyed presence on the writer's scene. Known for his butter knife (often errant) 'Straight Dope' column. Peggy's brother Ed FINALLY wrote a book.
An easily read adjective filled book about the evolving state of a house and city. An unengaged attempt at "humor". Eddy divides up the projects and all the superficial formalism involved. Ha Ha Ho Hum. This book falls into the same deadpan trap as Spielberg's movie 'The Money Pit'.
Well back to your cobwebbed desk at the 'Reader'.

Addendum: 09/29/08 ... Creative Loafing and The 'READER' file bankrupcy. Fodder for another witty book.



5 out of 5 stars The Brotherhood of the Right Way   September 3, 2008
 3 out of 4 found this review helpful

I gotta say I got a lot more out of this book than I was expecting to. (To be fair, I must state at the outset that as a college student 30 years ago, I worked for the author and his wife at the job where they met.) I knew from reading The Straight Dope columns (which Ed edits) that the book would be funny, but I haven't laughed at a book this hard, out loud, since Bill Bryson "A Walk in the Woods." But "The Barn House" also has a serious side, looking at the gains (and losses) of urban neighborhoods going upscale, and what separates "house" from "home," and needed repairs from obsession.

But the reason I give the book five stars is Ed's underlying concept in the book, and of life itself, which he's dubbed "The Brotherhood of the Right Way." You have to read the book to fully understand it, but he manages to explain a truth about people and their work habits that you'll instantly recognize. This is way more than a book about home repair and remodeling, and I can't recommend it enough.



5 out of 5 stars More than a Home Renovation Story   September 2, 2008
 1 out of 2 found this review helpful

I just finished The Barn House by Ed Zotti, and I truly enjoyed reading it. It's a whole lot more than what it appears on the surface. Yes, Zotti covers the details of his extensive home renovation. But he also includes historical information about Chicago - and large cities in general, intersperses vignettes about the lives of the people he meets during the project, and applies liberal humor throughout. His writing style is conversational and easy to follow, and he tackles his work with an energy level that makes you want to know if it all works out in the end. Great book - especially for those do-it-yourselfers who find themselves in over their heads or who can't stop watching HGTV and Ty Pennington!

Copyright 2006 - CD Shopper