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How to Make a Home

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At a time when work and home life are becoming increasingly blurred, and modern technology brings the realm of the public into what used to be a personal and private space, Ed Hollis looks at what it means to make a home in today's world.

Exploring the meaning of private and public space, the importance we place on physical objects and the demands we make of our home environment, How to Make a Home challenges us to re-imagine the concept of home and hearth.

161 pages, Kindle Edition

First published January 14, 2016

30 people are currently reading
386 people want to read

About the author

Edward Hollis

12 books6 followers
Edward Hollis studied Architecture at Cambridge and Edinburgh Universities and practised as an architect in Sri Lanka and Edinburgh. In 1999 he began lecturing at Napier University, Edinburgh and in 2004 he moved to Edinburgh College of Art, where he is Director of Research and Professor of Interior Design. His books include The Secret Lives of Buildings (2009), The Memory Palace: A Book of Lost Interiors (2013) and How to Make a Home (2016).

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5 stars
22 (10%)
4 stars
61 (29%)
3 stars
87 (41%)
2 stars
32 (15%)
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8 (3%)
Displaying 1 - 19 of 19 reviews
Profile Image for Ioana.
1,267 reviews
November 11, 2020
“Căminul reprezintă stabilitate într-o lume instabilă. Acasă este o metaforă pentru sine. Acasă este depozitul amintirilor. Căminul este făcut de noi și ne face ceea ce suntem. Acasă este locul unde putem fi noi înșine.”
Profile Image for Stephanie.
460 reviews39 followers
August 8, 2017
Takeaways: home isn't a place, it's an idea. Some people in the world don't have a permanent home, and plenty of people have little privacy. We think we want privacy, but isolation makes us less happy, and we often design our homes to welcome and impress other people. Very few people actually build their own home; most of us live in dwellings that weren't made specifically for us. We make it our own by furnishing and decorating it, and the way we do so is a reflection of who we believe ourselves to be, and who we aspire to become.
Profile Image for Vahid 22.
79 reviews13 followers
February 22, 2020
سالها پیش که دانشجوی معماری بودم کتابی به رمان انگلیسی خوندم که دقیقا عنوانش یادم نیست ولی راجع به تفاوت مکان و فضا صحبت میکرد و این کتاب هم تمام سعیش این بود که به ما تفاوتی رو بفهمونه که در زبان فارسی براش یک کلمه وجود داره ولی در زبان انگلیسی به عنوان home و house براش کلمات متفاوتی هست
Profile Image for Ardyth.
665 reviews63 followers
April 23, 2022
One of those public library stumble-upons. I won't deny the bright yellow cover, small dimensions and very few photographs won this title a coveted space in my library bag. ;)

Not sure what I expected, really, but it isn't what I got... and that's okay, in this case. Philosophical musings not design or home management how-to, and (it turns out) that was what I needed right now.

I could say more, but mild surprise as it unfolded was a big part of why I enjoyed the book.
Profile Image for S.P. Moss.
Author 4 books18 followers
February 18, 2016
'How to make a home' is a joy to read, not purely for its content, but for the aesthetic and tactile qualities of this little book. It looks and feels more like a notebook than a classic textbook, and even contains pages to make notes at the end.

In this intelligently-written book, Edward Hollis takes the reader through the meaning of home and how this has changed over the course of history. From building a home, to furnishing a home, to decorating a home, collecting a home, keeping a home and finally 'how to make a home when you're not at home', Hollis examines the topic through a multi-focal lens of architecture, interior design, anthropology, sociology, psychology and history. The prose is, however, never academic or dry.

This book takes the approach of challenging assumptions, primarily that is is possible to 'make' the 'perfect home'. I won't give away the author's final conclusion, but it is an intriguing thought.

I have one question about the book. The title is 'How to Make a Home' but, while activities such as furnishing, collecting 'stuff' and housework are discussed in depth, there seems strangely little reference to the human life that goes on in the home, except in the final chapter. This seems odd given that the book is one of a series from 'The School of Life.'

In summary, a lovely little book with plenty of food for thought and references to follow-up further.
Profile Image for Annikky.
604 reviews315 followers
May 1, 2016
Expected to like it, but was possibly in the wrong mood. I didn't feel that it made my life clearer or was genuinely helpful, as the blurb promised. I found it pretentious and tedious and somewhat patronising. I often enjoy pretentiousness, but not in a tandem with the other two. I only skim-read the second half, so keep grains of salt handy. The book itself is beautiful, though.
349 reviews
January 25, 2018
Disappointing. Does not even come close to the depth and quality of "How to find fulfilling work", also published in the "School of Life" series. This reads like an only superficially researched highschool project, with a handful of interesting ideas that go nowhere and lots of name-dropping across the fields of history, philosophy, architecture, and psychology.
2,794 reviews70 followers
August 8, 2017

Reaching way back into ancient Rome, with the Tugurium Romuli, (the house of Romulus), sailing through the centuries up to the likes of Frank Lloyd Wright’s, Taliesin, Hollis covers the idea of home, from a number of varied and interesting angles. He mentions people like Gaston Bachelard, who constructed a house as a metaphor, which included his id, ego and super ego. The various philosophies and ideas of Alfred Loos get an airing, as does the stern, minimalism of Le Corbusier.

Hollis makes a good point, when he says that when it comes to houses, most of us are cuckoos rather than blackbirds and the vast majority of people in the world are unable to plan and build a house of their choosing and will likely be living in a home older than them, which will have had previous occupants. He touches on some of the less glamorous aspects around the home, saying, “Most housework isn’t about improving things, it’s the endless, thankless, repetitive drudgery of keeping them pretty much the same. And that is not something we are trained to value. The modern conception of the ‘career’ is deeply wedded to the idea of progress.”

He explores some of Csikszentmihalyi’s interesting concepts, such as his theories of ‘flow’ activities, which he calls autotelic, meaning that “they serve no other end than themselves. You don’t do them for money, or promotion, or recognition, but because you have to.” He also collects the thoughts and opinions from people as varied as Elsie de Wolfe and Mrs Beeton to George Orwell and Joan Rivers, ensuring that we get quite a colourful patchwork of sources. There is also a splash of quirky photos and eye catching pictures, all of which makes for an informative and interesting enough read.
Profile Image for Veronika.
92 reviews7 followers
January 3, 2017
gentle, philosophical read that made me reevaluate what I call home. instead of norms and guidelines it offers perspectives and space for me to redefine what home means. Beautiful book, and a brave one, because the title sets expectations that many other books in the home keeping genre would attain to. But this book offers so much more than advice. It allows freedom.
Profile Image for Maui Rochell.
750 reviews1 follower
October 25, 2024
Finally got to finish this book after so many months! The School of Life books aren't just your typical how-to book but it encompasses everything from history, philosophy down to the practicality so it isn't always an easy read. But I'm glad to learn!

My favorite chapter is about How to Keep A Home. Housework doesn't ever end! It just keeps on going and that's the reality! 🫠
Profile Image for Jjpoor.
40 reviews4 followers
October 9, 2019
I almost didn't get the point of the book! I'm pretty sure the title is wrong (let's not say "lie"). It could be a "Very brief history of Interior design" or whatever, but not How to make a home. Different irrelevant stories are attached to each other to convey no idea! Interesting.
Profile Image for Cheri.
392 reviews
November 14, 2017
Esp like section mentioning flow and serious work.
Interesting read, contemplation inspiring.

Made :/ face when : people switching to paying for access over ownership. But that's really an aside.
Profile Image for Kim.
142 reviews6 followers
February 20, 2019
It's an okay book. It has some interesting stories and bits of history, but I'd be hard pressed to call it a "how to" book. It doesn't really discuss how to do anything.
Profile Image for Dominic Watson.
65 reviews
December 27, 2023
A good book about learning to ‘love what you have’ instead of ‘have what you love’, and how a home can be made from anything & anywhere as long as we have gratitude
Profile Image for cypher.
1,567 reviews
February 25, 2023
i love what i've read from The School Of Life book series, books on common topics that affect us all, and should be understood by as many as possible, but i think this subject is not really treated with enough depth. a bit too much surface level thinking.
i also don't really like the title, one should not plan to "make a home", this should be a natural, genuine process. imagine where we would be as a society if someone followed a step-by-step guide to artificially create the feeling of "home", quite scary. a better version perhaps: how to feel less restless in your environment and more regenerated when you spend time there :)
Profile Image for Mina Lobo.
Author 2 books22 followers
August 22, 2016
Most engaging when the author shared his own bits of decorative history, some bright "Aha!" moments, regarding the philosophy of"home." But somewhat arid and tedious as well. A promising theme which faltered now and again in execution.
Profile Image for Mugren Ohaly.
858 reviews
November 6, 2016
I'm disappointed. I was expecting this to be more like an actual guide on how to make a home, rather than a memoir-cum-history lesson.
Displaying 1 - 19 of 19 reviews

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