Book Review: The House Always Wins

thehousealwayswins

In The House Always Wins: Create the Home You Love–Without Busting Your Budget, author Marni Jameson takes readers through the process of creating a home by sharing her own home-ownership experiences.  She shares the struggle of creating a stylish and inviting home that is functional for her family, offering up what she learned from her mistakes as well as advice from the pros.  The result is an entertaining read than first-time home owners will find helpful as a guidebook to creating and maintaining a home.

Although Jameson is an award-winning nationally syndicated home design columnist, her stories humanize her and demonstrate that even people who deal with home design for a living are prone to the same issues run-of-the-mill folk face in appointing their homes.  She details agonizing over the multitude of different floorings available to choose from at the home design center, as well as the disaster of fly-by-night landscapers taking off with her money after creating a giant sink hole in her yard.

Like any contractor, Jameson begins with a foundation, building her book from initial decisions a homeowner must make that can be expensive, time-consuming, or down-right impossible to change.  For example, location is key, and it does not matter how richly appointed an interior is if you hate the city you live in, and that is not easily changed.  Similarly, finishes like flooring and cabinetry are very difficult to change, but at the same time can have a huge impact on what you can do with a space, so they need to be chosen carefully.  Once you’ve got a backdrop to work with, she brings in furniture, providing insight into buying quality pieces that will work for you without getting ripped off.  Finally, she discusses accessories and other finishing touches that make a room feel warm and inviting.  She even provides information for holiday decorating and specific-purpose rooms.  And all of this keeps in mind the fundamental process of determining one’s own personal style and keeping it in mind so as not to be swayed by fads or styles that may look great in the showroom, but ultimately will not appeal to the homeowner over time. 

The book does lack a level of specificity.  I found myself from time to time thinking, “ok, I see this is something I need to look into, or watch out for, but how do I do that?”  However, given that it covers such a broad range of topics, this is a minor shortcoming.  One book cannot possibly cover in depth each and every topic Jameson addresses.  This is not so much a how-to book, but a general overview of what a homeowner will need to know and/or learn in order to be successful in creating a pleasing environment.  In other words, it might not have all the answers, but it helps you figure out what the questions are and where to start looking for answers. 

Overall, this was an enjoyable, quick read that provided a considerable amount of useful and interesting information about choosing a house and appointing such that you get a functional end product you are happy with.  I would certainly recommend it to anyone just starting on the process of creating a home.

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