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Marilynne Robinson wins the 2009 Orange Prize for Fiction
'This year's Orange Prize winner has a luminous quality to it that has drawn all of the judges to a unanimous decision.' Fi Glover, chair of judges
watch the awards ceremony video'Robinson makes us understand home isn’t just a place—it’s something we carry with us.'


main picture © Graham Jepson/Writer Pictures
author portrait © Getty Images -
Home
Marilynne Robinsonlisten to
Marilynne Robinson reading and discussing HomeFI Glover and Marilynne Robinson at the awards ceremony
read
Emma Brockes' interview with Marilynne Robinson in The Guardianreviews of Home
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synopsis
Jack – prodigal son of the Broughton family, godson and namesake of John Ames (main protagonist of Robinson’s previous novel), gone twenty years, has returned home looking for refuge and to try to make peace with a past littered with trouble and pain. A bad boy from childhood, an alcoholic who cannot hold down a job, Jack is perpetually at odds with his surroundings and with his traditionalist father, though he remains Broughton’s most beloved child.
His sister Glory has also returned to Gilead, fleeing her own mistakes, to care for their dying father. Brilliant, loveable, wayward, Jack forges an intense new bond with Glory and engages painfully with his father and his father’s old friend, John Ames.
Marilynne Robinson
is the author of the novels Housekeeping (1981), chosen as one of the Observer’s 100 greatest novels of all time, received the PEN/Hemingway Award for the best first novel and was nominated for the Pulitzer Prize and Gilead (2004) which won the Pulitzer and the National Book Critics Circle Award. She has also written two works of non-fiction, Mother Country and The Death of Adam, and teaches at the Iowa Writers’ Workshop.
