House lessons Renovating a life

Erica Bauermeister

Book - 2020

"In this memoir-in-essays, New York Times bestselling author Erica Bauermeister renovates a trash-filled house in the eccentric town of Port Townsend, WA, and in the process takes readers on a journey into the ways our spaces subliminally affect us, ultimately showing us how to make our houses (and lives) better"--

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BIOGRAPHY/Bauermeister, Erica
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Subjects
Genres
Autobiographies
Published
Seattle : Sasquatch Books [2020]
Language
English
Main Author
Erica Bauermeister (author)
Physical Description
xiii, 225 pages : illustrations ; 23 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references.
ISBN
9781632172440
  • Author's Note
  • Prologue
  • Part I. Discovery
  • Falling in Love
  • Spirit of Place
  • Maintenance
  • The Four Rs
  • Part II. Digging Out
  • Trash
  • Architects and Builders
  • Plaster and Lath
  • The Hearth
  • Part III. Digging In
  • Foundation
  • Design
  • Roots
  • The Kitchen
  • Details
  • The Roof
  • Part IV. Domus
  • The Empty Nest
  • Leaving Home
  • The Writing Shed
  • The Dinner
  • Acknowledgments
  • Bibliography
Review by Booklist Review

Almost anyone who's ever let heart rule head will nod, at the very least, at the stories that a 100-year-old house in Port Townsend, Washington, evokes. In her memoir of falling in love with a house, novelist Bauermeister (The Scentkeeper, 2019) details every cranny, cove, and piece of plaster. Recently returned from a two-year stint in Bergamo, Italy, with family, Bauermeister spied a somewhat ramshackle house in the ""wilds"" of the Olympic Peninsula. When its owner passes away and lawyers agree to a sale with buyers committing to a clean-out, so begins Bauermeister and her husband, Ben's year-plus of dump-trucking all types of hoarded items, and many-years-long process of rebuilding the home from the foundation up. Serendipity leads Bauermeister to architect Roman Greggory, who helps return the home to its original American Foursquare design. Family bonds are strengthened, Bauermeister's two children grow up, and, a total of 17 years later, Bauermeister and Ben can thoroughly inhabit their masterpiece. This will resonate with any readers who love words and old houses.--Barbara Jacobs Copyright 2020 Booklist

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.

The house stood at the top of a hill, ensnarled in vegetation, looking out over the Victorian roofs of Port Townsend and beyond, to water and islands and clouds. It seemed to lean toward the view as if enchanted, although we later learned that had far more to do with neglect than magic. The once-elegant slopes of its hipped roof rolled and curled, green with moss. The tall, straight walls of its Foursquare design were camouflaged in salmon-pink asbestos shingles, the windows covered in grimy curtains or cardboard. Three discarded furnaces, four neon yellow oil drums, an ancient camper shell, and a pair of rusted wheelbarrows lay scattered at odd angles across the overgrown grass as if caught in a game of large-appliance freeze tag. The yard was Darwinian in its landscaping--an agglomeration of plants and trees, stuck in the ground and left to survive. Below the house, I could just see the tips of a possible orchard poking up through a roiling sea of ivy. In front, two weather-stunted palm trees flanked the walkway like a pair of tropical lawn jockeys gone lost, while a feral camellia bush had covered the porch and was heading for the second story. Someone had hacked away a rough opening for the front stairs, down which an assortment of rusted rakes and car mufflers and bags of fertilizer sprawled in lazy abandon. In their midst, seemingly oblivious to its setting, sat a rotting fruit basket, gift card still attached. "That one," my husband, Ben, said as he pointed to the house. "It's not for sale," I noted. "I know. But it should be, don't you think?" Our son and daughter, ten and thirteen, stared out the car windows slack-jawed. "You're kidding, right?" the kids asked. But I think they already knew the question was rhetorical. Excerpted from House Lessons: Renovating a Life by Erica Bauermeister All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.