The mystery that attracts Howard Mansfield's attention is that some houses have lifeare home, are dwellings, and others aren't. Dwelling, he says, is an old-fashioned word that we've misplaced. When we live heart and soul, we dwell. When we belong to a place, we dwell. Possession, they say, is nine-tenths of the law, but it is also what too many houses and towns lack. We are not possessed by our home places. This lost quality of dwellingthe soul of buildingshaunts most of our houses and our landscape.
Dwelling in Possibility is a search for the ordinary qualities that make some houses a home, and some public places welcoming.
Introduction: House Hunting Dwelling in the Ordinary Pages From an Ice Storm Journal The Age of Clutter Finding Heaven in the Most Hated House on the Block The Perilous Career of a Footpath Dwelling in Destruction The Hut on Fire Keep the Home Fires Burning The Storm After The Storm Dwelling in Possibility Counting Houses Sheds The Beginner's Book of Dwelling Bibliography Acknowledgments
Howard Mansfield is the author of books about preservation, architecture, and history. He has contributed to the New York Times, the Washington Post, Historic Preservation, and Yankee. He and his wife, writer Sy Montgomery, live in a 130-year-old house in Hancock, New Hampshire.
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