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Cottage for Sale, Must Be Moved

johns July 23, 2004
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Read Time:2 Minute, 8 Second

Suppose you

live and work alone in a tiny, one-bedroom home on Cape Cod. Suppose you hope to expand

your home but you don’t really want to start from scratch. Suppose you see this ad in the

local paper: “Cottages for sale, $3,000 each, must be
moved.”



Kate

Whouley, in her delightful new memoir, Cottage for Sale, Must be Moved, is just

the type of person to ask, Why not?



Whouley’s book is a detailed account

of her inventive home expansion that goes far beyond a script for an episode of This

Old House. While there is more than enough fun construction and destruction detail to

satisfy even the most ardent
hammer-and-nail enthusiast, that’s not the real point of

the book. In taking readers through the her cottage’s move across Cape Cod to be joined

to her home, Whouley takes us on an even more interesting journey. She guides us through

her own
life–a life rich in family, friends (including one of American literature’s

most interesting cats), challenges, and personal growth and

satisfaction.



In the first half of the book, we mostly get to know the

intricacies of planning and implementing her cottage project. While we get a few hints at

who Whouley and her friends are, we get a great deal more about construction crews,

building movers, and town bureaucracy. This is great stuff, no question, but the second

half of the book delves more deeply into the people involved in Whouley’s

project.



As the house
expansion takes shape, the people come into

greater focus as well. As nails are driven and walls painted, the men holding the hammers

and brushes emerge into fuller clarity and complexity. In particular, we learn much more

about Whouley herself as
she lets us deeper into her unique life, agile mind, and

generous heart.



In the last few chapters, we see not only the complete

house, but a complete person as well. The last forty pages are as beautifully written as

any novel and as revealing and rewarding as the best memoirs.



In a genre

dominated by cash-cow celebrity/survival/blame memoirs, it’s a pleasure to read a

terrific account of an extraordinary time in a normal life. Overall, this
is a

wonderful book on many different levels. It’s a great how-to (and how-not-to) guide to

home improvement, a thoughtful reflection on the interconnections between human beings

and the world around them, and (above all) a beautiful look deep into
an exceptional

person.

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johns

http://adventuresinadulthood.mypodcast.com
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