Silas House Popular Books

Silas House Biography & Facts

Silas Dwane House (born August 7, 1971) is an American writer best known for his novels. He is also a music journalist, environmental activist, and columnist. His fiction is known for its attention to the natural world, working-class characters, and the plight of the rural place and rural people. House is also known as a representative for LGBTQ Appalachians and Southerners, and is among the most visible LGBTQ people associated with rural America. Early life and education House was born in Corbin, Kentucky, and grew up in nearby rural Lily, Laurel County, Kentucky. He also spent much of his childhood in nearby Leslie County, Kentucky, which he has cited as the basis for the fictional Crow County, the setting for his first three novels. He has degrees from Eastern Kentucky University (BA in English with emphasis on American literature), and from Spalding University (Master of Fine Arts in Creative Writing). In 2000, House was chosen, along with since-published authors Pamela Duncan, Jeanne Braselton, and Jack Riggs, as one of the ten emerging talents in the south by the Millennial Gathering of Writers at Vanderbilt University. At the time, he was a rural mail carrier. He sold his first novel shortly thereafter. Writing House's first novel, Clay's Quilt, was published in 2001. It appeared briefly on the New York Times Best Seller list and became a word-of-mouth success throughout the Southern United States. It was a finalist for both the Southeast Booksellers' Association Fiction Award and the Appalachian Writers' Association Book of the Year Award. He published his novel A Parchment of Leaves in 2003, which became a national bestseller and was nominated for several major awards. The book was a finalist for the Southern Book Critics' Circle Prize and won the Award for Special Achievement from the Fellowship of Southern Writers, the Chaffin Award for Literature, the Kentucky Novel of the Year Award, and others. House's next book, The Coal Tattoo (2004), was a finalist for the Southern Book Critics' Circle Prize, and won the Appalachian Writers' Association Book of the Year Award, the Kentucky Novel of the Year Award, and others. House's work has been championed by such acclaimed writers as Lee Smith, Brad Watson, and Larry Brown, all of whom were mentors for House. Barbara Kingsolver has said in print that House is one of her "favorite writers and favorite human beings", and environmental writer and activist Wendell Berry has expressed his appreciation of House many times, including during an interview with the New York Times. House published Something's Rising with creative nonfiction writer Jason Kyle Howard in March 2009. The book is a series of profiles of various anti-mountaintop removal activists from the region, including musicians Jean Ritchie and Kathy Mattea, author Denise Giardina, and activist Judy Bonds. The book was called "revelatory" by esteemed author and oral historian Studs Terkel, in his last blurb. Writers Lee Smith and Hal Crowther co-authored the introduction. House's fourth novel, Eli the Good, was published in September 2009 to great acclaim. The book emerged as a number one bestseller on the Southern lists and received the first annual Storylines Prize from the New York Public Library system, an award given to a book for use in the ESL and literacy programs of New York City, as well as an E.B. White Award given by the American Booksellers Association. His short story "Recruiters", which appeared in Anthology of Appalachian Writing, Vol. 2, also has a Larkspur Press edition from Kentucky's Artisan Printer. This special edition is illustrated by Arwen Donahue and includes the original song "Brennen's Ballad" by Sue Massek, which was the inspiration for the story. House's first book written for elementary-aged children, Same Sun Here, was co-written with Neela Vaswani and published in February 2012. The book was the winner of the Parent's Choice Award and was the #1 Most Recommended Book by Independent Booksellers in the nation in the spring of 2012. House and Vaswani recorded the highly successful audiobook version of the novel, which won an Earphones Award, and the Audie Award for Best Narration for Children's Title Ages 8–12, the highest honor given to audiobooks. The novel won over a dozen awards, including the Nautilus Award and a South Asian Book Association Honor Book. House's sixth novel, Southernmost, was published in June 2018 and was long-listed for the Andrew Carnegie Medal for Excellence in Fiction. The book was a SIBA bestseller and received wide acclaim, especially among other writers, including Dorothy Allison, Jennifer Haigh, Lee Smith, and Garth Greenwell. It won the 2019 Judy Gaines Young Book Award, given by Transylvania University annually to recognize an excellent book from the Appalachian region. The book won the Weatherford Award for Fiction, was longlisted for the 2019 Andrew Carnegie Medal, and was short-listed for the Willie Morris Award for Southern Fiction. House compiled a music playlist on the literature and music blog "Largehearted Boy" to accompany Southernmost. The playlist includes music by Brandi Carlile, Celia Cruz, Patsy Cline, and others. House's seventh novel, Lark Ascending, was released in the fall of 2022 and was an immediate indie bestseller and winner of the 2023 Southern Book Prize in the category of fiction. The book received praise from authors such as Barbara Kingsolver, Billy O'Callaghan, Wiley Cash, Margaret Renkl, and Michelle Gallen. The novel is considered a departure for House, as it is set twenty years in the future, mostly in Ireland. House has said the book is his mediation on grief, the demise of democracy, and the climate crisis. House's writing has appeared several times in The New York Times (including his hugely popular essay "The Art of Being Still") and The Atlantic. His work has also appeared in Time, The Washington Post, The Bitter Southerner, and other publications. In 2022 one of his essays was chosen as notable by editor Alexander Chee for the book The Best American Essays 2022. House's work has been anthologized in such books as New Stories From the South: The Year's Best, 2004 and Best Food Writing: 2014. He wrote the introductions to Missing Mountains, a study of mountaintop removal; From Walton's Mountain to Tomorrow, a biography of Earl Hamner, Jr.; and Gregory of Nyssa's Life of Moses, a new edition by HarperCollins. House's essays and short stories have been featured on NPR's All Things Considered several times during his time there as a commentator. House is also a playwright. In 2005, he wrote the play The Hurting Part, which was produced by the University of Kentucky. In 2009 his second play, Long Time Travelling, was produced by the Actor's Guild of Lexington (Kentucky). In 2012, Berea College Laboratory Theatre presented his controversial play, This Is My Heart For You, about a small town divided by a gay rights discrimination case and hate crime. The latter .... Discover the Silas House popular books. Find the top 100 most popular Silas House books.

Best Seller Silas House Books of 2024

  • Silas The Great House Cat synopsis, comments

    Silas The Great House Cat

    Janet Pogue Tolle

    A stray cat named Silas lives under the porch of a mansion called the Great House and watches a kind woman who lives there. Silas thinks the home is magical and dreams of being ind...

  • Silas House synopsis, comments

    Silas House

    Sylvia Bailey Shurbutt

    Bestselling author, journalist, playwright, and activist Silas House has focused nearly all of his work on Appalachia. His acclaimed and diverse body of work includes the novels Cl...

  • Northanger Abbey synopsis, comments

    Northanger Abbey

    Jane Austen

    'Jane Austen is a genius, and Northanger Abbey is hugely underrated' Martin AmisWith its irrepressible heroine and playful literary games, Northanger Abbey is the most youthful and...

  • Nostromo synopsis, comments

    Nostromo

    Joseph Conrad

    'There is something in a treasure that fastens upon a man's mind. He will pray and blaspheme and still persevere, and will curse the day he ever heard of it, and will let his last ...

  • A Christmas Carol and Other Christmas Writings synopsis, comments

    A Christmas Carol and Other Christmas Writings

    Charles Dickens

    'Every idiot who goes about with "Merry Christmas" on his lips, should be boiled with his own pudding'Dickens's story of solitary miser Ebenezer Scrooge, who is taught the true me...

  • The Mannequin House synopsis, comments

    The Mannequin House

    R. N. Morris

    Detective Inspector Silas Quinn investigates one of the strangest cases of his career...London, 1914. Called out to investigate the murder of an employee of the House of Brackley, ...

  • The Time Machine synopsis, comments

    The Time Machine

    H.G. Wells & Patrick Parrinder

    'The father of science fiction' GuardianThe Time Machine is the first and greatest modern portrayal of timetravel. It sees a Victorian scientist propel himself into the year 802,70...

  • Uncle Silas synopsis, comments

    Uncle Silas

    J. Le Fanu

    One of the most significant and intriguing Gothic novels of the Victorian period and is enjoyed today as a modern psychological thriller. In UNCLE SILAS (1864) Le Fanu brought up t...

  • Uncle Silas synopsis, comments

    Uncle Silas

    Joseph Sheridan Le Fanu

    Maud Ruthyn is an heiress who lives with her somber, reclusive father Austin Ruthyn in their mansion at Knowl. Through her father and her worldly, cheerful cousin, Lady Monica Knol...

  • Old Crimes synopsis, comments

    Old Crimes

    Jill McCorkle

    Beloved author Jill McCorkle delivers a collection of masterful stories that are as complex as novelsdeeply perceptive, funny, and tragic in equal measureabout crimes large and sma...

  • David Copperfield synopsis, comments

    David Copperfield

    Charles Dickens

    Now a major film directed by Armando Iannucci, starring Dev Patel, Tilda Swinton, Hugh Laurie, Peter Capaldi and Ben Whishaw'The greatest achievement of the greatest of all novelis...

  • Sketches by Boz synopsis, comments

    Sketches by Boz

    Charles Dickens & Dennis Walder

    'Sets out the London of the 1830s before you, streets, people, pleasures, low life, prisons' Claire TomalinCharles Dickens's first published book, Sketches by Boz is a funny and to...

  • Complete Gothic Suspense Supernatural of J. S. Le Fanu synopsis, comments

    Complete Gothic Suspense Supernatural of J. S. Le Fanu

    J. S. Le Fanu

    An Irish writer of Gothic tales and mystery novels. He was the leading ghoststory writer of the nineteenth century and was central to the development of the genre in the Victorian ...

  • Complete Horror Gothic Ghostly Mysteries of Joseph Sheridan Le Fanu synopsis, comments

    Complete Horror Gothic Ghostly Mysteries of Joseph Sheridan Le Fanu

    Joseph Sheridan Le Fanu

    An Irish writer of Gothic tales and mystery novels. He was the leading ghoststory writer of the nineteenth century and was central to the development of the genre in the Victorian ...