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Original Title: The road home
ISBN: 0701177934 (ISBN13: 9780701177935)
Edition Language: English
Characters: Christy, Rudi, Ina, GK Ashe, Lidia, Lev, Maia
Setting: London, England(United Kingdom)
Literary Awards: Orange Prize for Fiction (2008), Costa Book Award Nominee for Novel (2007), LovelyBooks Leserpreis Nominee for Allgemeine Literatur (2009)
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The Road Home Hardcover | Pages: 365 pages
Rating: 3.86 | 8141 Users | 767 Reviews

List Epithetical Books The Road Home

Title:The Road Home
Author:Rose Tremain
Book Format:Hardcover
Book Edition:First Edition
Pages:Pages: 365 pages
Published:August 28th 2007 by Chatto and Windus (first published May 21st 2007)
Categories:Fiction. Contemporary. European Literature. British Literature

Chronicle During Books The Road Home

Fiction so convincing that it could be a true story.

The journey begins with Lev's bus journey from his home in Eastern Europe to the loneliness of impersonal London. Lev is into his early forties, has recently lost his wife to cancer and believes that the only way that he can support his very young daughter and his mother is to find himself a job in London. His life-long friend, who supposedly knows such things, has told Lev that he should be able to get by in London on £20 a week. The truth becomes apparent within 24 hours of his arrival at Victoria Bus Terminus when he finds out how much it's going to cost for one night's B&B.

During the bus journey, Lev has struck up a friendship with a female teacher who already has good contacts in London. Throughout the book, this lady comes to Lev's rescue in times of trouble. Unsurprisingly, finding work is not as easy has Lev had thought it would be. However, following his adventures, with their ups and downs, is an enjoyable ride, liberally splashed with some good humour and many touching moments and reminiscences.

This book will make you laugh and it will make you cry. It will make you think about the society that we live in. It is a wonderful book.

Rating Epithetical Books The Road Home
Ratings: 3.86 From 8141 Users | 767 Reviews

Evaluation Epithetical Books The Road Home
I ordered The Road Home with the usual expectations that one would have for a book by an admired author. But, oh dear. It is unbelievable at so many levels, as well as schematic and sentimental. There are irritating little mistakes of fact that Rose Tremain shouldn't make: London underground trains running on Christmas Day; a man's mobile is stolen, he gets another and is instantly rung on it, even though of course the sim card will have remained in the stolen phone so no one would know his new



As I'm now discovering with Rose Tremain's novel Restoration, this is a writer who likes to take her time, to give you the full picture of a life so that, come the end of the book, she has you good and proper. This is a strong portrait of life as an economic migrant and is well worth investing your time and emotions.

Review from 2009Tremain is clearly a talented writer with very descriptive writing, good dialogue, good pacing (I found the story enjoyable and interesting albeit not compelling) and the ability for good and complex characterisation and story line. The descriptions of the restaurant were surprisingly engaging (unlike the modern art and plays described), Rudi a strong character (although his complete breakdown when the dam is proposed in contrast to his usual confidence is not really explored)

This review is from: The Road Home: A Novel (Paperback) This is a truly moving story about a man who loses everything. His wife dies and his job is finished so he moves to England to make a new start. He is still mourning, hoomesick and ill prepared to make this transition. Yet every day he gets up and chooses life. He finds work, learns a new trade, finds housing, makes friends and gets a girlfriend. He never gets over his homesickness but he makes steps forward each and every day. He plans a

When youre old nobody touches you nobody listens to younot in this bloody country.so thats what I do. I touch and I listen.This novel tells the story of Lev who leaves his home country and like so many others is heading west. His wife, Marina, has died of leukaemia, his five-year-old daughter, Maya, is living with her grandmother and 42-year-old Lev, a former lumberyard worker is travelling to London to find work.Lev arrives in a dusty, midsummer city full of hope but things, however, do not

I wasn't disappointed by this book, because I am now pretty sure Rose Tremain will never write another book as brilliant as Music & Silence. This is a good read, with a topical subject: a Polish man who has to come to find work in the UK to support his mother and daughter back in Poland. I liked Lev; he was a believable character, and most of the ups and downs of his life in Britain were realistic -- though he was much luckier than most new immigrants when he found a job in a very smart