In Curtis White's first novel, The Idea Of Home, he attempts to imagine
a place in which humans can live. This utopia is definitely not San
Lorenzo - a post-war, prefabricated suburb in California - where White
grew up and which is the basis for this novel. From the vantage point of
anoff-kilter adulthood, White spins recent American history together
with personal observations and investigations into the dark heart of
American suburbia. Shocking, yet very funny and always learned, The Idea
Of Home is a mix of the personal and the philosophical in an energetic
collage that would resemble the biographies of Nietzsche and Mark Twain
if they had grown up in the San Francisco Bay Area in the 1950s and
'60s.