House Arrest
Mary Morris, called "a marvelous storyteller" by The Chicago Tribune, returns with the finest novel in her acclaimed career—a vividly etched, engrossing story of a nation, two remarkable women, and the meaning of freedom.

Taut with tension, filled with the telling observations of place and local character that grow out of her expertise as a travel writer, House Arrest is Mary Morris's richest, most powerful novel to date.

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House Arrest
Mary Morris, called "a marvelous storyteller" by The Chicago Tribune, returns with the finest novel in her acclaimed career—a vividly etched, engrossing story of a nation, two remarkable women, and the meaning of freedom.

Taut with tension, filled with the telling observations of place and local character that grow out of her expertise as a travel writer, House Arrest is Mary Morris's richest, most powerful novel to date.

21.0 In Stock
House Arrest

House Arrest

by Mary Morris
House Arrest

House Arrest

by Mary Morris

Paperback(REV)

$21.00 
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Overview

Mary Morris, called "a marvelous storyteller" by The Chicago Tribune, returns with the finest novel in her acclaimed career—a vividly etched, engrossing story of a nation, two remarkable women, and the meaning of freedom.

Taut with tension, filled with the telling observations of place and local character that grow out of her expertise as a travel writer, House Arrest is Mary Morris's richest, most powerful novel to date.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780312155476
Publisher: Picador
Publication date: 05/15/1997
Edition description: REV
Pages: 272
Product dimensions: 5.50(w) x 8.50(h) x 0.62(d)

About the Author

Mary Morris is also the author of the novels The Night Sky, (available from Picador), Crossroads, and The Waiting Room; two travel memoirs, Nothing to Declare: Memoirs of a Woman Traveling Alone and Wall to Wall: From Beijing to Berlin by Rail; and the award-winning story collections Vanishing Animals and Other Stories and The Bus of Dreams. Her new story collection is The Lifeguard. Mary Morris teaches writing at Sarah Lawrence College and lives in Brooklyn, New York, with her husband and daughter.

What People are Saying About This

Richard Ford

House Arrest is a novel that sneaks into one's thinking...it steadily and winningly opens forth...it's a subtle and intelligent and affecting book, fully aware of itself, fully formed.

Reading Group Guide

House Arrest is the harrowing novel about Maggie Conover, a travel writer in a Caribbean island nation, who is placed under house arrest in her hotel after befriending the missing daughter of the nation's revolutionary leader. As Maggie is interrogated, bullied, and brought to a fever pitch of anxiety, she recalls her new friend's courage, her own troubled past, her longing for home, her daughter and family. Based on Mary Morris's own experience in Cuba, House Arrest is a story of both personal and political intrigue, as well as the meanings of freedom and its loss.

Discussion Questions:
1. How would you describe Maggie's house arrest? Is it just political, or does it operate on another level? If so, how?

2. Morris was actually arrested in Cuba so there is an autobiographical component to this book. Where do you think the truth ends and the story begins? What clues do you have that this is the case?

3. Why do you think Morris chose to deal with this material in a novel rather than as a work of nonfiction?

4. In telling these multilayered stories of women Morris use monologues. What function do these serve?

5. La isla is based on Cuba, yet Morris never calls it Cuba. How is or isn't la isla Cuba, and why do you think Morris chose not to name it?

6. Maggie is taking a definite risk in helping Isabel. Why does she take such a risk?

7. What do the different voices contribute to how we read this story? How do they help us interpret la isla?

About the Author:
Morris began writing when she was a graduate student at Columbia. "I wrote one [short story] and sent it to Redbook. They bought it and paid me a phenomenal amount of money. I wrote another and they paid me more money. I thought, this is great, I'm going to make a living as a short story writer. Then for 10 years I didn't sell another story commercially . . . I was just about to give up when I got an NEA grant."

Mary Morris is also the author of the novels Acts of God, The Night Sky, (both available from Picador USA), Crossroads, and The Waiting Room; two travel memoirs, Nothing to Declare: Memoirs of a Woman Traveling Alone and Wall to Wall: From Beijing to Berlin by Rail; and the award-winning story collections Vanishing Animals and Other Stories and The Bus of Dreams. Her new story collection is The Lifeguard. Mary Morris teaches writing at Sarah Lawrence College and lives in Brooklyn, New York, with her husband and daughter.

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