Call it a ghost story or a gothic romance, one thing is certain about Orson Scott Card's novel, Homebody: it's not science fiction. One of the most celebrated SF authors of the last twenty years, Card has rarely written outside the genre. But his passion for characterization and spirituality make him exceptional in a genre too often obsessed with high-concept plots and technological gimmickry. He is, perhaps, better equipped than most SF writers are to be able to stray from its parameters.Homebody introduces us to Don Lark. Despite his mellifluous name, Lark carries a terrible burden. A few years back, his alcoholic ex-wife killed herself and their baby daughter in a car crash. By that time the legal fees from their bitter custody battle had already bankrupted his construction company and left him broke. Overwhelmed with grief and rage at the loss of his daughter, he retreats from the world. When he resurfaces, Lark finds a new way to make a living: he buys cheap run-down houses, fixes them up and sells them for a profit.This lonely nomadic existence seems to suit Lark just fine until he runs into the Bellamy house, an old southern mansion with a past even more tragic than his own. Soon after Lark takes ownership of the Bellamy house, his solitary lifestyle begins to change. He strikes up a romance with real estate agent Cindy Claybourne. He makes friends with his next-door neighbors, a trio of elderly southern matrons. And when he discovers Sylvie, a homeless waif squatting in the house, he allows her to stay while he finishes the renovation.As Lark continues his work, he begins uncovering clues to the mystery of the house's dark past. What is the secret of the prohibition-age rumrunner's tunnel beneath the basement? When he probes deeper into the puzzle, Sylvie and ladies next-door begin to behave strangely. Who is it that Sylvie speaks to when she is alone? Why do his elderly neighbors implore him to cease his renovation work and tear the house down? Even as forces conspire against him, Lark drives on. His quest to exorcise the ghosts that haunt the Bellamy house paralleling his desire to face his own personal demons and rebuild his life.Despite the absence of SF conventions, Homebody deals with typical Card themes of family, spirituality, loss, and salvation. Lark is an archetypal Card protagonist: a decent, honest, compassionate man hanged by fate, and struggling to reclaim the peace of a forgotten past. Card's interest in redemption themes sometimes causes his stories to veer toward sentimentality. If that's a problem for you, then Homebody's probably not your book. While Lark's suffering is real and heart wrenching, the novel offers perhaps the least ambivalent conclusion in Card's oeuvre -- some may find it a bit too rosy.Still, Card's prodigious gifts bubble to the surface. He effortlessly captures the breezy small-town atmosphere of his native Greenboro, and juxtaposes it effectively against the creepy claustrophobia of the Bellamy house. The narrative rushes along breathlessly as Lark peels back the layers concealing the house's tragic secrets. Card skillfully builds the paranoia and suspense, cranking it up to fever pitch during the breathless finalé. Lark emerges as a complex but always sympathetic protagonist. You can't help but be swept up in the scope of his grief and the exhilaration of his spiritual rebirth.
About half of the book reads like a season of This Old House. If I hadn't just had my own house built, I'd have probably gotten very bored before page 100. That's probably the only reason I gave this 3 instead of 4 stars: because the house parts make it slow.Of course the house parts are important. Every part is important, and you can see that at the end. That's what Card does. That and characters, and it was the characters that brought me through the story. Even though I should be bothered that the protagonist is a tough, working, blue collar guy - a man's man, the anti-geek - he didn't bother me at all. In fact, I liked him. He was a real person with real problems and I wanted him to succeed. I wanted everyone to succeed.That's what Card always does well - he makes us care about his characters, and even though I know how he does it (Card wrote an excellent how-to-write book called Characters and Viewpoint), it doesn't make it any less effective.
What do You think about Homebody (1999)?
Card es Card, con sus vicios y sus virtudes... con lo cual quiero decir que, no siendo ésta una de sus mejoras novelas, al menos resulta de tan amena lectura como el resto. El tema de la casa encantada, de por sí interesante, está tratado de forma bastante original dentro del estilo habitual del subgénero, pero quizá hay un exceso de intimismo en el planteamiento, con esa historia de amor que resulta un tanto excesiva en su concepción súbita y fulminante.Diría que se trata de una obra menor del autor, más centrada en lo psicológico que en lo sobrenatural, aunque con algunos buenos momentos, especialmente cuando la cosa se pone más oscura. Un tres redondo.
—Estibaliz79
Orson Scott Card always produces an excellent book. He takes you right into his characters' thoughts and hearts so that you can't help but be engrossed by their story. At the same time, he leads you to think about something in a new way. Homebody is the story of a man haunted by a grief in his past, who buys up old, rundown but structurally sound houses and renovates them, then sells them. In this case the house is haunted, but this is not simply a haunted house story. It is the house itself, a semi-sentient thing, that is intriguing. I was left thinking, what makes a house a home? Why are some houses warm and welcoming and others cold and uninviting? Is it really simply a matter of decorating? Read this book, and decide what you think.
—J.A. McLachlan
I thought this was a pretty good ghost story overall. I love our book club tradition of reading something kind of spooky in October. I liked the setup, which talked about how the house came to be; about the original construction and then Don's renovation. But then I could read architecture books all day long! I also thought it was kind of suspenseful with the mysterious neighbors and all that.What I didn't like; I never like when I feel as if I'm reading a screenplay. When the romance moves along too fast and for no apparent reason, When there's a heavy reliance on physical stuff like explosions, and stuff flying around. That's how I felt about this.
—Jenifer