"Vivid. . . . Affecting. . . . A liberating demonstration of the power of faith."
--The Wall Street Journal
"An absorbing account of growing up in the 1960s South, living with a disability, becoming a writer and finding faith. Richard's book attests to the power of words (and the Word) in shaping a life. . . . Richard is a fiercely gifted writer. . . . [His] special childhood results in considerable powers of observation, empathy and imagination."
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The New York Times Book Review "So varied, dramatic, and, at times, incredible that it is bound to leave almost every reader with the feeling that they haven't lived at all."
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The New Yorker "Entrancing. . . . A surprising page turner. . . . Richard's prose is gorgeous--and hits with a force that sometimes stuns. . . . Where other memoirists--evangelical and/or literary--just bluff and brag, he makes art."
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The Christian Science Monitor "Amazing. . . . You'll know just after two pages of Richard's effortlessly killer prose that he's special all right. . . . Grade: A."
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Entertainment Weekly "Mark Richard's memoir,
House of Prayer No.2, is the finest book he's ever written. No one writes like him. His prose style is both hammerblow and shrapnel. He has written the book of his life."
--Pat Conroy
"A lyrical distillation of observations from Richard's boyhood in and out of southern charity hospitals to his becoming a writer and father in search of faith."
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Vanity Fair "Hauntingly beautiful. . . . A quintessentially American story."
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Minneapolis Star Tribune "A surreal and poetic memoir about faith, self-discovery and forming an artistic inner life."
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The Free Lance-Star (Fredericksburg, VA)
"A humorous and heartfelt memoir, never tedious and often lyrical."
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Richmond Times-Dispatch "This book is the extraordinary story of a special child who grew up to be a writer, and who may yet--I'm guessing--become a preacher or a priest. There are similar life stories in the South and elsewhere. But few will be written with Richard's powerful talent, his genius."
--Clyde Edgerton,
Garden & Gun "Gritty and engrossing. . . . His is an account, at times exquisite, of a youth laced with pain, surgeries, body casts, beatings, fear, drinking, isolation, rebellion. With flashes of brilliance. With mysticism and the supernatural and strokes of what many would call luck. . . . An interesting, well-crafted narrative girded with compassion and feeling, this is a good read."
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The Virginian-Pilot "Lovely. . . . Richard captures what is often misunderstood about the Southerner's intimate parlay with God. Appearances to the contrary, it is not about certainty. . . . A fascinating journey."
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The Oregonian "Hot damn! And Glory be! Both. This is a wonderful book."
--Roy Blount, Jr.
"Supremely animated. . . . [Richard's] spiritual journey, conducted in fits and starts and finally claimed in gorgeous hosannas of prose, forms the book's narrative DNA."
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Elle "Richard's story is inspirational not because of conventional redemption or simple answers to his struggle, but because he is so honest about both his doubt and his openness to a wide variety of God's manifestations."
--Darcey Steinke,
Los Angeles Review of Books "Affecting. . . . Fans who have been waiting to hear from him ever since [
Charity] won't be disappointed with his new memoir, which sees the welcome return of Richard's charismatic prose style."
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The Atlanta Journal-Constitution "The precision of the descriptions is marvelous in this memoir of growing up with infirmity. The depth of Richard's heart is profound, exhilarating, frightening, instructive.
House of PrayerNo. 2 is a work of high art."
--Rick Bass
"Mark Richard says important things about finding one's way, about love in action, about being a father, and he does so with the precision and grace of an artisan from another time. This is some of the finest writing you will ever read."
--Amy Hempel
"If Mark Richard could not write, you could not read this. Since he can, you can't not read it. It is unreal, and Mr. Richard has the wit to make it real."
--Padgett Powell
Crippled by deformed hips as a child, Mark Richard was told he would spend his adult life in a wheelchair. The son of an unpredictable, violent father and a mother who sought inner peace through scripture, Richard spent his bedridden childhood in the company of books. As a young man, he set out to experience as much of the world as possible before his hips failed him. He spent years doing odd jobs and getting into trouble, grappling throughout with his faith and his calling, before winning a national fiction contest and launching an extraordinary writing career.
In this irresistible blend of history, travelogue, and personal reflection, Richard draws a remarkable portrait of a writer’s struggle with his faith, the evolution of his art, and the recognition of one’s singularity in the face of painful disability.
. NOTA: El libro no está en español, sino en inglés.