The acclaimed author of Red Clocks returns with a biting,lyrical novel about an intergenerational group home run by an ex-musician determined to make a place for those without one On a bluff above a river rises The Housewhere elderly and disabled residents live alongside young people who help out in exchange for free rent. The community is led by a former punk singer who never wanted to be responsible for anyone yet now finds herself the caretaker of this precarious collection of lives. It’s not a familyexactlybut it’s got the complicatedsometimes painfulsometimes hilariousdynamics of kinship. When two kids–Nola and her little cousin James–show up on The House’s back porch in need of refugethe whole experiment is thrown into question. All are welcome hereor that was the idea. But the authorities are looking for these childrenand The House’s finances are teetering on the edge. Zumas’s long-anticipated third novel wrestles with America’s crisis of care in a tautachingpolyphonic tale that moves as fast as the crackling comebacks that fly between The House’s residents over breakfast. As the rules of the outside world start to press in on this safe havenreaders will find themselves askingwhat would the world look like if everyone had a place to belong?