The Yellow House (Record no. 5539)

MARC details
000 -LEADER
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008 - FIXED-LENGTH DATA ELEMENTS--GENERAL INFORMATION
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020 ## - INTERNATIONAL STANDARD BOOK NUMBER
International Standard Book Number 978-1472155580
082 ## - DEWEY DECIMAL CLASSIFICATION NUMBER
Classification number 823
Item number BRO
100 ## - MAIN ENTRY--PERSONAL NAME
Personal name Broom, Sarah
245 #4 - TITLE STATEMENT
Title The Yellow House
260 ## - PUBLICATION, DISTRIBUTION, ETC. (IMPRINT)
Place of publication, distribution, etc London
Name of publisher, distributor, etc Corsair
Date of publication, distribution, etc 2019
300 ## - PHYSICAL DESCRIPTION
Extent 376p.
520 ## - SUMMARY, ETC.
Summary, etc This memoir is about the inexorable pull of home and family, set in a neglected New Orleans neighborhood. In 1961, Sarah M. Broom's mother, Ivory Mae, a fiercely determined and recently widowed nineteen-year-old, invested her life savings in a shotgun house in then-promising neighborhood of New Orleans East. It was the height of the Space Race and the area was home to a major NASA plant. The optimism of postwar America seemed endless. In the Yellow House, Ivory Mae and her second husband, Simon Broom, who would be Sarah's father, built domestic tranquility one wobbly renovation at a time, their dreams perpetually under construction. The family would eventually number twelve children. When Simon died, six months after Sarah's birth, the Yellow House became Ivory Mae's thirteenth and most unruly child. A brilliant interweaving of reporting, archival research, and gorgeously rendered family lore, The Yellow House tells the story of a mother's struggle against a house's entropy, and that of a daughter who left home only to be continually pulled back, even after the house was wiped off the map by Hurricane Katrina. This book transforms the Yellow House of Ivory Mae's creation into an emblem of civic apathy. She revises the map of New Orleans to include its lesser-known residents, a native daughter deftly demonstrating how the enduring drives of clan, pride, and familial love resist and defy erasure. Located in the gap between the "Big Easy" of tourist guides and the New Orleans in which Broom was raised, this is an eye-opening memoir of place, identity, race, the insidious rot of inequality, and the internalized shame that often follows.--description from dust jacket
650 ## - SUBJECT ADDED ENTRY--TOPICAL TERM
Topical term or geographic name as entry element English Literature
650 ## - SUBJECT ADDED ENTRY--TOPICAL TERM
Topical term or geographic name as entry element Inequality
650 ## - SUBJECT ADDED ENTRY--TOPICAL TERM
Topical term or geographic name as entry element National Book Award
650 ## - SUBJECT ADDED ENTRY--TOPICAL TERM
Topical term or geographic name as entry element Race
650 ## - SUBJECT ADDED ENTRY--TOPICAL TERM
Topical term or geographic name as entry element Social conditions
942 ## - ADDED ENTRY ELEMENTS (KOHA)
Item type Books
Holdings
Withdrawn status Lost status Damaged status Not for loan Permanent location Current location Date acquired Source of acquisition Cost, normal purchase price Total Checkouts Full call number Barcode Date last seen Koha item type
        Ektara Trust Ektara Trust 23/12/2010 Page-3 Books 679.15   818.609/BRO 5049 31/03/2023 Books
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