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Mr. Blandings builds his dream house de Eric…
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Mr. Blandings builds his dream house (original: 1946; edição: 1946)

de Eric Hodgins

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3841166,219 (3.64)18
The classic tale of leaving the city and building a house in the country, only to find country life isn't so simple . . . Mr. Blandings is a successful New York advertising executive. He and his wife want to escape the stifling confines of their tiny midtown Manhattan apartment, so they design the perfect home. When the time comes for the couple to move to their idyllic country location, they learn fast and furiously that the picture of easy-going perfection that they had dreamed about is far from any form of reality. Soon the Blandings are knee-deep in construction troubles, temperamental workmen, skyrocketing bills, threatening lawyers, and difficult neighbors. Mr. Blandings' dream house is quickly becoming his nightmare.… (mais)
Membro:lwitfoth
Título:Mr. Blandings builds his dream house
Autores:Eric Hodgins
Informação:New York : Simon and Schuster [1946]
Coleções:collectable, Sua biblioteca
Avaliação:*****
Etiquetas:Nenhum(a)

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Mr. Blandings Builds His Dream House de Eric Hodgins (1946)

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» Veja também 18 menções

Mostrando 1-5 de 11 (seguinte | mostrar todas)
I purchased this as a gift to my wife after we had moved back in to our remodeled house. We both knew the story going in since we're huge fans of the movie (which I also highly recommend); there are slight differences, but over all the story is familiar.
It is very much a book of its time, upper middle class city people, getting taken advantage of by those slick country folk. it's a bit of a throw-back, but a very fun and quick read. Apparently he wrote a sequel, so I'm on the hunt for that. ( )
  hhornblower | Jan 24, 2023 |
It was clever, sly, and funny... until it started to get real and read like a horror story or a morality tale. Read it. But don't start to take it seriously like I did. ( )
  OutOfTheBestBooks | Sep 24, 2021 |
Mr. Blandings is doing well at work and decides it is time to own his own house. So he goes to Connecticut and buys land to build his dream house.

It starts slow. It is better when you read it with sarcasm as Mr. Blandings has trouble with the seller, the architects, and the builder. It becomes extremely funny in Book 2 when I read Mrs. Blandings' journal entries about it. The ownership of the house is funny also as Mr. Blandings figures out how much this house cost him and now he is responsible for repairs and additions he hopes to add ( )
  Sheila1957 | Apr 28, 2017 |
My mom and dad ran a custom home building company, one where I grew up half on job sites and the other half sitting quietly in a corner as clients discussed what they wanted. For reasons that would become apparent, the movie with Cary Grant, Mr Blandings Builds His Dream House, was one of their favorites.

I didn't even know it was a book until recently, and immediately checked it out from the library. If you're familiar with the movie - and liked it - take heart, because the script paid close attention to the book. As someone familiar with clients who misunderstood the nature of change-orders or that, indeed, they cost extra money, or clients who argue ferociously over whether or not an extra closet is really needed, or even a home-owner yourself, you'll laugh yourself sick.

Mr. and Mrs. Blandings naively step into home-owning, and later home-building, and find themselves stuck in the mud before too long. All of the joys and terrors of buying a home - the "other people" your real estate agent keeps ominously mentioning, the contractors, the subcontractors, the owners themselves - everyone is hilariously skewered in the most accurate account of building a home ever written; amazingly, all of this humor remains the same, even though the book was published in 1946. ( )
  kittyjay | Apr 23, 2015 |
If you've ever built a house, you are probably familiar with the myriad frustrations that plague such an endeavor. There's the dazzling array of choices you have to make, many of which you never once considered before signing on the dotted line with a builder. There are the inevitable slowdowns of work due to late deliveries, ornery inspectors, bad weather, and so forth. There are the unexpected problems and their resulting ballooning price tags, because the initial bottom line cost has never once in the history of building turned out to be the actual cost. But even with everything that can cause stress, it's worth it to be able to design exactly what you want in a home, right? The hilarious novel Mr. Blandings Builds His Dream Home by Eric Hodgins might argue that.

Set in the 1940s, the novel is definitely dated, but it still manages to earn the reader's giggles. The Blandings, who have never before thought of living out of the City, have decided to build a country home. Mr. Blandings works in advertising and has been very successful with an important laxative account. His newly secure position makes him think that he should, like others of his level, build a home in the country, and his wife concurs. They traipse around the countryside, falling in love with a neglected, ramshackle, historic home and property on Bald Mountain just outside a small Connecticut town. And this is where their trouble starts. First they must deal with a slick real estate agent and the local owner, who is up-charging these city folk for the land by about 1000%. Then they hire an architect, and then another architect. Then they actually have to build their new home, deal with the tradesmen who come in to work on the place, and experience all of the pitfalls that every first time homebuilder experiences.

These experiences are completely and totally entertaining. Mr. Blandings can't decide whether it is better to lose face and be cheated or if it's better to confront people. His bumbling attempts to right wrongs and to make his dream home live up to billing are good fun. His constant totting up of the amount he's spending on this home, revised almost daily as his wallet takes hit after hit after hit, really strikes a cord. Everything that can go wrong for the Blandings does and Hodgins mines the deep humor in Mr. Blandings' resigned blusterings. Mrs. Blandings' inability to rein herself in and her complete lack of understanding how each decision she makes, especially once construction has started, snowballs into costing massive amounts of money is both pretty true to life and helps the reader understand Mr. Blandings' exasperation with her. The humor here can be over the top and Hodgins skewers his "act in haste, repent at leisure" characters pretty neatly. For all the Blandings' naivety and infuriating requests, the building trade doesn't get off scot free either. The numbers quoted for each bill are laughably low given today's costs but since the original budgeted cost is mentioned frequently, the reader will still get a sense of how far over budget the Blandings have gone. The book is a witty and entertaining comedy of errors filled with one liner gems, buried in the dry, sometimes biting presentation and it definitely makes me want to see the Cary Grant, Myrna Loy movie of the same name. ( )
  whitreidtan | Feb 8, 2015 |
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Hodgins, Ericautor principaltodas as ediçõesconfirmado
Steig, WilliamIlustradorautor secundáriotodas as ediçõesconfirmado
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The sweet old farmhouse burrowed into the upward slope of the land so deeply that you could enter either its bottom or middle floor at ground level.
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The classic tale of leaving the city and building a house in the country, only to find country life isn't so simple . . . Mr. Blandings is a successful New York advertising executive. He and his wife want to escape the stifling confines of their tiny midtown Manhattan apartment, so they design the perfect home. When the time comes for the couple to move to their idyllic country location, they learn fast and furiously that the picture of easy-going perfection that they had dreamed about is far from any form of reality. Soon the Blandings are knee-deep in construction troubles, temperamental workmen, skyrocketing bills, threatening lawyers, and difficult neighbors. Mr. Blandings' dream house is quickly becoming his nightmare.

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