House Stories: The Meanings of Home in a New England Town

House Stories: The Meanings of Home in a New England Town

by Beth Luey (Author), Beth Luey (Author), Beth Luey (author) (Author)

Synopsis

Historic houses adorned with plaques populate New England like nowhere else in the country. These plaques note the construction year and original owner of the house, but they tell nothing about the rich lives of the people who lived there. In House Stories, Beth Luey takes readers on a virtual walking tour of several historic houses in Fairhaven, Massachusetts, a small New England coastal town, inviting us in to learn each house's secrets.

Through letters and diaries, church and business records, newspaper accounts, legal documents, and the recollections of neighbors who knew them, Luey introduces the diverse cast of historical characters who lived in these houses at various times from 1800 to the 2000s, including a Japanese castaway and his rescuer, a self-made millionaire, a seagoing adventurer, a religious pioneer, and an entrepreneurial immigrant. All of the houses are still standing and all but a lighthouse are still called home. In House Stories, Luey asks readers to join her as she considers the multiple meanings of home for these people and their families.

$33.53

Quantity

20+ in stock

More Information

Format: Paperback
Pages: 200
Publisher: University of Massachusetts Press
Published: 30 Oct 2017

ISBN 10: 1625343116
ISBN 13: 9781625343116

Media Reviews

Luey's storytelling is marked by her ability to introduce characters in a manner which enables readers to visualize themselves walking the neighborhoods and smelling the salty breeze from the harbor that separates it from the port of New Bedford...Our recommendation of House Stories: The Meanings of Home in a New England Town cannot be overstated.

--SOCO Magazine

[P]eople who are interested in the relationship between people and their homes, or who enjoy well-researched local history and good yarns of the sea, mixed with a bit of insider gossip, should read House Stories. The book reminds us that people are more important than their dwellings, and more ephemeral, and their stories are what make their homes important to preserve.

--The Public Historian
Author Bio
Beth Luey is author of Expanding the American Mind: Books and the Popularization of Knowledge (University of Massachusetts Press, 2010).