3.5
Call Me Home
By Megan Kruse & Elizabeth GilbertPublisher Description
5 Under 35 Honoree
National Book Foundation
Megan Kruse is a young writer of raw and fearless talent and Call Me Home showcases all she can do. She writes here of harrowing lives — of a family bent and broken by violence, where each person is desperately trying to somehow grow toward light and liberation. In the process, she offers a most unlikely tale of hardness and hustle, of grace and loss, of painful love and tough breaks and the unimaginable paths we must all eventually take toward survival. —Elizabeth Gilbert, Author of Eat, Pray, Love
Call Me Home is an uncommonly powerful debut novel. Megan Kruse writes with great heart and intelligence as she crafts a gripping story from the shards of a broken family. —Jess Walter, Author of Beautiful Ruins
I’ve been a big fan of Megan Kruse for a long time, but Call Me Home left me astonished by her talent. Beautifully written, deeply felt and utterly compelling, this story of a desperate family separated and on the run is full of unforgettable scenes and richly imagined characters and heady suspense. It’s so vivid, it feels like my own memory. I recommend it with all my heart. —Dan Chaon, Author of Await Your Reply
Megan Kruse has written a tough, unflinching and very loving story about an isolated family trying to scrape by and find a way, one way or another, to survive. I was deeply moved by the lives of her characters and scared for them right up to the end. Just a wonderful book, in every way. —Beverly Lowry, Author of Crossed Over: A Murder, A Memoir
An urgent, beautiful book about love and its consequences, set against a backdrop of the unglamorized West. These characters will lodge themselves in your imagination, stick with you long after you’re done reading. A fine and original first novel. —Kevin Canty, Author of Winslow in Love
I’m not sure how Megan Kruse did it. Her first novel manages to be a swift yet contemplative story of how a family can love each other fiercely even when every heart involved gets broken. Through its cast of characters, she is able to focus on what makes a human life shine with joy or ache with conflict. Her writing is cinematic—going from intense close-ups to beautiful sweeping wide shots. Call Me Home is a multi-layered and deeply felt wonder. —Kevin Sampsell, Author of A Common Pornography
I can’t stop thinking about this book. Call Me Home is a harrowing, beautiful, and tender novel about the meaning of home, loneliness, and the endurance of love. Megan Kruse is a talented and fearless writer, and the prose is just stunning. Call Me Home is a tremendous accomplishment. —Carter Sickels, Author of The Evening Hour
Megan Kruse is a stunning and inspiring new voice in American literature. Her beautiful debut, Call Me Home, proves that even as the violence of our lives invents us, a story can do something like save us. Read it and stick it in your heart. —Ariel Gore, Author of The End of Eve
The language is stunning, and the book delivers all the satisfactions of characterization and story that I seek in a great novel. Cai Emmons, The Register-Guard
A powerful debut novel told with ferocity and grace. STARRED REVIEW Publishers Weekly
The art Kruse brings to her endeavor will carry the day. MICHAEL CART Booklist
What is home, and where is your life supposed to be, if where you are is a place of pain and fear? These are questions that arise in “Call Me Home,” Seattle author Megan Kruse’s impressively forceful debut novel. WINGATE PACKARD Seattle Times
Kruse’s evocative, often lyrical language serves her subjects well, so that what results is not unleavened pain but painful beauty, even hope. JULIA JENKINS Shelf Awareness
Call Me Home, packs quiet power… Kruse can craft a fine sentence. SARA RAUCH Lambda Literary
Megan Kruse’s first novel startles in its capacity for complexity... a blistering story of lightness and darkness, the power of family and the capacity we have to hurt those closest to us.” RACHEL HURN
The San Francisco Chronicle
Kruse’s quiet debut hints at a formidable literary power as she explores what it means to live with fear while also searching for some sense of home. JEANNE KOLKER Wisconsin State Journal
National Book Foundation
Megan Kruse is a young writer of raw and fearless talent and Call Me Home showcases all she can do. She writes here of harrowing lives — of a family bent and broken by violence, where each person is desperately trying to somehow grow toward light and liberation. In the process, she offers a most unlikely tale of hardness and hustle, of grace and loss, of painful love and tough breaks and the unimaginable paths we must all eventually take toward survival. —Elizabeth Gilbert, Author of Eat, Pray, Love
Call Me Home is an uncommonly powerful debut novel. Megan Kruse writes with great heart and intelligence as she crafts a gripping story from the shards of a broken family. —Jess Walter, Author of Beautiful Ruins
I’ve been a big fan of Megan Kruse for a long time, but Call Me Home left me astonished by her talent. Beautifully written, deeply felt and utterly compelling, this story of a desperate family separated and on the run is full of unforgettable scenes and richly imagined characters and heady suspense. It’s so vivid, it feels like my own memory. I recommend it with all my heart. —Dan Chaon, Author of Await Your Reply
Megan Kruse has written a tough, unflinching and very loving story about an isolated family trying to scrape by and find a way, one way or another, to survive. I was deeply moved by the lives of her characters and scared for them right up to the end. Just a wonderful book, in every way. —Beverly Lowry, Author of Crossed Over: A Murder, A Memoir
An urgent, beautiful book about love and its consequences, set against a backdrop of the unglamorized West. These characters will lodge themselves in your imagination, stick with you long after you’re done reading. A fine and original first novel. —Kevin Canty, Author of Winslow in Love
I’m not sure how Megan Kruse did it. Her first novel manages to be a swift yet contemplative story of how a family can love each other fiercely even when every heart involved gets broken. Through its cast of characters, she is able to focus on what makes a human life shine with joy or ache with conflict. Her writing is cinematic—going from intense close-ups to beautiful sweeping wide shots. Call Me Home is a multi-layered and deeply felt wonder. —Kevin Sampsell, Author of A Common Pornography
I can’t stop thinking about this book. Call Me Home is a harrowing, beautiful, and tender novel about the meaning of home, loneliness, and the endurance of love. Megan Kruse is a talented and fearless writer, and the prose is just stunning. Call Me Home is a tremendous accomplishment. —Carter Sickels, Author of The Evening Hour
Megan Kruse is a stunning and inspiring new voice in American literature. Her beautiful debut, Call Me Home, proves that even as the violence of our lives invents us, a story can do something like save us. Read it and stick it in your heart. —Ariel Gore, Author of The End of Eve
The language is stunning, and the book delivers all the satisfactions of characterization and story that I seek in a great novel. Cai Emmons, The Register-Guard
A powerful debut novel told with ferocity and grace. STARRED REVIEW Publishers Weekly
The art Kruse brings to her endeavor will carry the day. MICHAEL CART Booklist
What is home, and where is your life supposed to be, if where you are is a place of pain and fear? These are questions that arise in “Call Me Home,” Seattle author Megan Kruse’s impressively forceful debut novel. WINGATE PACKARD Seattle Times
Kruse’s evocative, often lyrical language serves her subjects well, so that what results is not unleavened pain but painful beauty, even hope. JULIA JENKINS Shelf Awareness
Call Me Home, packs quiet power… Kruse can craft a fine sentence. SARA RAUCH Lambda Literary
Megan Kruse’s first novel startles in its capacity for complexity... a blistering story of lightness and darkness, the power of family and the capacity we have to hurt those closest to us.” RACHEL HURN
The San Francisco Chronicle
Kruse’s quiet debut hints at a formidable literary power as she explores what it means to live with fear while also searching for some sense of home. JEANNE KOLKER Wisconsin State Journal
Download the free Fable app
Stay organized
Keep track of what you’re reading, what you’ve finished, and what’s next.Build a better TBR
Swipe, skip, and save with our smart list-building toolRate and review
Share your take with other readers with half stars, emojis, and tagsCurate your feed
Meet readers like you in the Fable For You feed, designed to build bookish communities9 Reviews
3.5
Alexandra S
Created about 1 year agoShare
Report
Lydia Mulligan
Created about 6 years agoShare
Report
hellblazer
Created over 6 years agoShare
Report
Ashley Kiewlich
Created about 7 years agoShare
Report
JenMN
Created about 9 years agoShare
Report
About Megan Kruse
Megan Kruse is a fiction and creative nonfiction writer from the Pacific Northwest. She studied creative writing at Oberlin College and earned her MFA at the University of Montana, where she was awarded a Bertha Morton scholarship. Her creative writing has appeared in Narrative Magazine, The Sun Witness Magazine, Thumbnail Magazine, Bellingham Review, and Phoebe, among others. She lives in Seattle.
Elizabeth Gilbert is an American author, essayist, short story writer, biographer, novelist and memoirist. She is best known for her 2006 memoir, Eat, Pray, Love, which spent 199 weeks on the New York Times bestseller list, and was also made into a film by the same name. She lives in Frenchtown, NJ.
Elizabeth Gilbert is an American author, essayist, short story writer, biographer, novelist and memoirist. She is best known for her 2006 memoir, Eat, Pray, Love, which spent 199 weeks on the New York Times bestseller list, and was also made into a film by the same name. She lives in Frenchtown, NJ.
Other books by Megan Kruse
Start a Book Club
Start a public or private book club with this book on the Fable app today!FAQ
Do I have to buy the ebook to participate in a book club?
Why can’t I buy the ebook on the app?
How is Fable’s reader different from Kindle?
Do you sell physical books too?
Are book clubs free to join on Fable?
How do I start a book club with this book on Fable?