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Nobody's Home
 
 
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Nobody's Home [Hardcover]

Dubravka Ugresic (Author), Ellen Elias-Bursac (Translator)
4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)

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Book Description

September 2008
Every day and age has its rules. Currently, good behavior dictates that we be politically correct, evade conflicts, espouse tolerance, and make no hasty judgments. To be judgmental is viewed as one of the most reprehensible human traits. People are likely to think today that an optimist is a good person, while a pessimist is the lowest of the low. Picking your nose in public is more forgivable then being pessimistic. [. . .] We live in a time that urges us to behave as if we are in paradise. Yet the world we live in is no paradise. This book breaks the rules of good behavior, because it bickers. This series of thought-provoking and incisive essays from Dubravka Ugresic explores the full spectrum of human existence. From life in exile to life in prison, from bottled-water drinking tourists with massive backpacks to the Eurovision song contest, Ugresic's unfailingly sharp critical eye never fails to reveal what has been hidden in plain sight by routine, or uncover the tragic, and the comic, in the everyday.

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Editorial Reviews

Review

Ugresic is sharp, funny and unafraid. . . . Orwell would approve. -- Times Literary Supplement

Ugresic never commits a sloppy thought or a turgid sentence. Under her gaze, the tiredest topics of the `tired' continent (migration, multiculturalism, `new Europe') spring to life. Ellen Elias-Bursać's translation captures all her irony and mischief. -- The Independent

Ugresic's wit is bound by no preconceived purposes, and once the story takes off, a wild freedom of association and adventurous discernment is set in motion. Open to the absurdity of all pretensions of rationality, Ugresic dissects the social world, especially the endless nuances of gender and sexuality. -- World Literature Today

About the Author

Dubravka Ugresic is the author of several works of fiction, including The Museum of Unconditional Surrender and The Ministry of Pain, and several essay collections, most recently Thank You for Not Reading. In 1991, when war broke out in the former Yugoslavia, Ugresic took a firm anti-nationalistic stand and was proclaimed a "traitor," a "public enemy," and a "witch," and was exposed to harsh and persistent media harassment. As a result, she left Croatia in 1993 and currently lives in Amsterdam.

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 297 pages
  • Publisher: Open Letter Books; First Edition edition (September 2008)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1934824003
  • ISBN-13: 978-1934824009
  • Product Dimensions: 8.4 x 5.7 x 1.1 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 2.7 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #862,926 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Intelligent commentary on exile and dislocation, September 22, 2008
This review is from: Nobody's Home (Hardcover)
Nobody's Home is a collection of essays by a Croatian writer exiled in Amsterdam. After being declared a traitor, a public enemy, and a witch in 1991 because of her anti-nationalistic views, Ugresic was forced to leave her homeland. Not surprisingly, Nobody's Home focuses on themes of exile and dislocation. In a particularly poignant passage, Ugresic writes:

"[E]xiles live submerged in trauma. ... The only way exiles are able to leave trauma behind is to not leave it behind at all, but to live it as a permanent state, to turn their waiting room into a cheery ideology of life, to live the schizophrenia of exile as the norm of normalcy and to revere only one god: the Suitcase!"

The first part of this five-part collection contains brief, personal musings on topics ranging from flea markets to birdhouses. This part is the most charming of this collection because it is the most personal. Here is where Ugresic calls tourists "those industrious airline consumers" and remarks that "[h]istory and culture are the most reliable 'banks' for laundering a dirty conscience." Every page gives a new perspective.

The later parts of this collection are filled with insights into East-West cultural clashes and literary politics. In contrast to the first part, these parts are more strident and argumentative. There are plenty of interesting ideas here, but Ugresic becomes a bit more repetitive in the second half of the book. Overall, Nobody's Home is a worthwhile and thought-provoking read.

Nobody's Home is the first publication of Open Letter Books, the University of Rochester's new non-profit publishing house for works in translation.
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4.0 out of 5 stars The Grumpy Essayist, January 9, 2012
By 
las cosas (Ajijic-San Francisco) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Nobody's Home (Hardcover)
This is the third book of essays by Ms. Ugresic that I've read, and I would recommend starting with either of the other two: The Culture of Lies or Thank You for not Reading. Not that I disliked this book, simply that half of it consists of 800 word riffs on anything she wanted to write, published over a three year period in a Swiss newspaper. Read once a week in my local paper, they might be interesting. Piled on on top of one another, they are less so. It takes a particular type of writer to write a coherent essay in three pages, and that is not her strong suit. That lies in the longer essays that comprise the second half of the book, particularly Europe, Europe, What is European about European Literature and The Souvenirs of Communism (which was one of my favorite essays from another Open Letter book, The Wall in my Head).

What I appreciate most about this writer is her eternal grumpiness. The Wall in my Head (mentioned above) is a set of essays about the end of communism, and the before and after changes. In some of these there is a nostalgia for a world lost, but it is only grumpy Ugresic who calls into question the basic assumption that things have gotten better. This is a reoccurring theme in many of her books, including this one. Comparing the service industry in her native Croatia to her present home of Amsterdam she finds the ex-Communist countries striving to master the secrets of democracy that will result in more money and therefore a purportedly better life. Thus while service (buying bread, getting a birth certificate) under communism was characterized by petty rules completely without logic, these same inanities have morphed westward to places such as Amsterdam.

I must jointly credit Ms. Ugresic and Ellen Elias-Bursac, the translator, for some vividly descriptive phrases: tutti-frutti ideologues, diplobrats, Big Brother the household pet, ficus the communist flora. And the endless paradoxes that we in the West fail to understand about life in Eastern Europe under communism, and after. Women in 1960s Yugoslavia had many rights not enjoyed in the West, but few choice of tampons. Endless Eastern Europeans have moved to the West since 1989 to take crappy jobs. Does that mean the West has conquered the East, or the other way around?
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4.0 out of 5 stars Sharp essays, April 9, 2011
This review is from: Nobody's Home (Hardcover)
"Nobody's Home" is not the kind of book I would normally read and as a matter of fact, took my time reading. Reading the first half took almost 9 months. The second half, a day. The book can easily be divided into these two sections - the first part of the book is mostly made up of small stories while the last three sections are composed of longer essays. The essays throughout the book deal with a number of fascinating subjects without losing a sense of coherency or stylistic shift. It's quite rewarding.

Dubravka Ugresic writes matter-of-factly about many topics, but mostly turns a rather sharp gaze on our definitions. She discusses "immigrant" topics at length, the matters of identity and national pride, and the way the world works in a way that makes a lot of sense. Even though I didn't always agree with Ugresic's bold declarations, I respected them. I learned from them. I appreciated them.

"Nobody's Home" is unlike most other essay collections you'll read. There's some dark humor sprinkled here and there, but these are not essays to be read for pure entertainment. These are clever, sharp essays that will make you think about topics that may never have occurred to you, and may offer you alternative opinions on those you've encountered. Full of brilliant and thoughtful remarks, "Nobody's Home" is a good essay collection. It just needs to be taken in small bites.
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Inside This Book (learn more)
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
successful memoir
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Goli Otok, New York, European Union, Eastern Europe, Anne Frank, United States, The Easterners, West European, Paulo Coelho, World War, East European, Monica Lewinsky, Western Europe, The Golden Calf, New Year, Hague Tribunal, Princess Diana, Albert Heijn, Oprah Winfrey, Rio de Janeiro, Second Avenue, Big Brother, The Bulgarians, Tom Hanks, Lea Deutsch
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