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Something Like a House

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After deserting from his unit during the Korean War, British soldier James Stuart Fraser is captured and sent to live with a minority tribe in the highlands of Communist China. Winner of the Whitbread First Novel Award.

224 pages, Hardcover

First published January 1, 1955

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Sid Smith

27 books8 followers

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5 stars
6 (9%)
4 stars
17 (27%)
3 stars
22 (36%)
2 stars
9 (14%)
1 star
7 (11%)
Displaying 1 - 6 of 6 reviews
Profile Image for Sherry Sjostrom.
7 reviews
February 17, 2012
The start of the book was a little disjointed. I found it hard to follow where the main character was at - how he got there - and what his character was like. You got little snippets through the book but nothing that felt that you really knew or understood the main character, Fraiser, who was a British deserter in the Korean war. Why he deserted and decided to stay in China - who knows? It was only at the end of the book (last 30 pages) and reading the Afterword by the author, Sid Smith, that you became aware of the main purpose of the book - biological warfare, experiments conducted by the Chinese to see what pathogen would destroy certain ethnic races without harming the Chinese race. The title of the book? Something like a house - refers to the Chinese character that spells out the main characters name - who throughout the book is referred to as Frasier or the long nose. I'm not in any big hurry to read Sid Smith's other book A House by the River - maybe someday to see if it was any better.
Profile Image for Dave Martin.
18 reviews6 followers
July 12, 2013
This is above average westerner-lives-in-rustic-Chinese-village tale could have been great. It's all very well written. Its minimalist prose is striking. Early abuse leads to bonding with the natives. Close to the end, however, the book is suddenly transformed into science fiction. The sudden switch reminded me of 'Miss Smila's Feeling for Snow' - OK, so there's not exactly an alien killer worm in the last chapter, but you get the picture.

202 reviews
March 6, 2015
OK. WWII deserter lives in Remote village in China
656 reviews3 followers
April 14, 2016
eh... this book definitely wasn't published in 1955!!!!! 2001, people! ;-)
Displaying 1 - 6 of 6 reviews