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  <id type="integer">2729053</id>
  <isbn>1400065267</isbn>
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  <title>
    <![CDATA[Home Girl: Building a Dream House on a Lawless Block]]>
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    <![CDATA[After twenty years as a foreign correspondent in tumultuous locales including Rwanda, Chechnya, and Sudan, Judith Matloff is ready to put down roots and start a family. She leaves Moscow and returns to her native New York City to house-hunt for the perfect spot while her Dutch husband, John, stays behind in Russia with their dog to pack up their belongings. Intoxicated by West Harlem&#8217;s cultural diversity and, more important, its affordability, Judith impulsively buys a stately fixer-upper brownstone in the neighborhood.<br/><br/>Little does she know what&#8217;s in store. Judith and John discover that their dream house was once a crack den and that &#8220;fixer upper&#8221; is an understatement. The building is a total wreck: The beams have been chewed to dust by termites, the staircase is separating from the wall, and the windows are smashed thanks to a recent break-in. Plus, the house&#8211;crowded with throngs of brazen drug dealers&#8211;forms the bustling epicenter of the cocaine trade in the Northeast, and heavily armed police regularly appear outside their door in pursuit of the thugs and crackheads who loiter there. <br/><br/>Thus begins Judith and John&#8217;s odyssey to win over the neighbors, including Salami, the menacing addict who threatens to take over their house; MacKenzie, the literary homeless man who quotes Latin over morning coffee; Mrs. LaDuke, the salty octogenarian and neighborhood watchdog; and Miguel, the smooth lieutenant of the local drug crew, with whom the couple must negotiate safe passage. It&#8217;s a far cry from utopia, but it&#8217;s a start, and they do all they can to carve out a comfortable life. And by the time they experience the birth of a son, Judith and John have even come to appreciate the neighborhood&#8217;s rough charms.<br/><br/>Blending her finely honed reporter&#8217;s instincts with superb storytelling, Judith Matloff has crafted a wry, reflective, and hugely entertaining memoir about community, home, and real estate. <em>Home Girl</em> is for anyone who has ever longed to go home, however complicated the journey.<br/><br/><u>Advance Praise for Home Girl</u><br/><br/>&#8220;Although I always suspected that renovating a house in New York City would be a slightly more harrowing undertaking than dodging bullets as a foreign correspondent, it took this charming story to convince me it could also be more entertaining. Except for the plumbing. That&#8217;s one adventure I couldn't survive.&#8221;<br/>&#8211;Michelle Slatalla,  author of <em>The Town on Beaver Creek</em><br/><br/>&#8220;After years of covering wars overseas, Judith Matloff takes her boundless courage and inimitable style to the front lines of America&#8217;s biggest city. From her vantage point in a former crack house in West Harlem, she brings life to a proud community held hostage by drug dealers and forgotten by policy makers. Matloff&#8217;s sense of humor, clear reportage, and zest for adventure never fail. Home Girl is part gritty confessional, part love story, and totally delightful.&#8221;<br/>&#8211;Bob Drogin, author of <em>Curveball</em><br/><br/>&#8220;Here the American dream of home ownership takes on the epic dimensions of the modern pioneer in a drug-riddled land. Matloff&#8217;s story, which had me crying and laughing, is a portrait of a household and a community, extending far beyond the specifics of West Harlem to the universal&#8211;as all well-told stories do.&#8221;<br/>&#8211;Martha McPhee, author of <em>L&#8217;America</em>]]>
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        <name><![CDATA[Judith Matloff]]></name>
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    <average_rating>3.47</average_rating>
    <ratings_count>73</ratings_count>
    <text_reviews_count>29</text_reviews_count>
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  </authors>  <published>2008</published>
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  <date_added>Sat Jul 04 05:42:09 -0700 2009</date_added>
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