Unspeakable Home, Ismet Prcic
Unspeakable Home, Ismet Prcic
List: $25.99 | Sale: $18.20
Club: $12.99

Unspeakable Home

Author: Ismet Prcic

Narrator: Ismet Prcic

Unabridged: 9 hr 48 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Published: 08/06/2024


Synopsis

From award-winning writer Ismet Prcic, a “brutal and tender and beautiful” (Tommy Orange, author of Wandering Stars) novel that is “part existential cry…part anguished confession…a transfiguring of personal memory to obscure the terrible cost of exile” (The New York Times).

Having fled his war-torn hometown of Tuzla as a teenager, our narrator, Izzy, found love and a measure of stability in California with his beloved. But his American marriage couldn’t survive his Bosnian brokenness, the trauma so entrenched and insidious that it became impossible to communicate to anyone outside of himself—even the person he loved most. Now, as he writes in the first of many courageously candid fan letters to the comedian Bill Burr, he knows he must try.

“An adventurous novel that meshes a fragmented narrative with a broken soul” (Kirkus Reviews), Unspeakable Home takes us through Izzy’s memories and confessions as he reflects on his bomb-ravaged childhood, the implosion of his relationships, and an agonizing battle with alcoholism. As multiple narrators surface in fragments with increasingly tenuous connections to reality, Prcic unearths the psychological cost of exile and shame with a roving, kinetic energy and a sharp, searching sense of humor.

What emerges is a vivid and poignant exploration of the stories we create to hide the deepest parts of our identity from ourselves, as well as a hard-won, life-affirming promise of redemption.

About Ismet Prcic

Ismet Prcic was born in Tuzla, Bosnia-Herzegovina in 1977 and immigrated to America in 1996. His first novel, Shards, was a New York Times Notable Book, a Chicago Sun-Times Best Book of the Year, as well as the winner of the Sue Kaufman Prize and the Los Angeles Times Art Seidenbaum Award for first fiction.


Reviews

Goodreads review by Krista on April 05, 2024

neither TO AND FRO in shadow from inner to outershadow from impenetrable self to impenetrable unself by way of neither as between two lit refuges whose doors once neared gently close, once turned away from gently part again beckoned back and forth and turned away heedless of the way, intent on the o......more

Goodreads review by Lynette on March 30, 2025

Brilliant!......more

Goodreads review by Sam on July 25, 2024

Started off really well but just slogged towards the end. I liked the blending of reality and fiction and how the author seems to reach out beyond the page so the act of writing becomes intertwined with the novel, but at the end it became too lyrical and vague to keep up. On a sentence level, Prcic......more

Goodreads review by Dave on December 14, 2024

I can't tell how much is memoir and how much is fiction, and I don't want to find out. A story of a man who emigrates from Bosnia during the war and tries to assimilate in America, but it's definitely not a straightforward narrative. I like that there are references to his punk past, but they aren't......more

Goodreads review by Kayla on March 26, 2025

I was confused most of the time. I understand it wasn’t the usual book I read, but the different stories and different characters that were introduced and then forgotten in a random hodgepodge were just too much for me. I struggled to finish this one.......more