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Juliet Blackwell | Hearst Castle Dreams

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About halfway down the coast of California stands a grand estate on a hill
overlooking the Pacific Ocean. Called San Simeon, or Hearst’s Castle, it is,
indeed, much more than house. It was commissioned by William Randolph Hearst,
the newspaper heir, and built by the amazing Berkeley-based architect, Julia
Morgan – a bespectacled woman who, at 4’11”, ran her own construction crew at a
time when women were told to stay home, mind the children, and leave public life
to the menfolk.

As a native Californian, I toured Hearst Castle as a child. The estate is a
Gothic/Italianate/Spanish revival wonder, a mix of styles and resources and
artwork. With Hearst’s almost unlimited checkbook, Morgan took trips to a
war-torn Europe and bought entire rooms – paneling, ceiling medallions, corbels,
built-ins – and whole stone staircases. She purchased ancient Roman birdbaths
and medieval tapestries. She imported mural panels and dismantled small stone
houses to be rebuilt in the garden as guest accommodations.

Also, Julia Morgan designed two swimming pools: one a Grecian wonder featuring
massive columns, and the other a subterranean fantasy of cobalt blue and
brilliant gold. It took me years to get over that sparkling grotto – in fact, I
never quite outgrew it!

So when I sat down to write the fifth entry in my Haunted Home Renovation series, I couldn’t stop thinking about the audacity of importing entire ancient European buildings to the U.S. Who does something like that? Since my main character, Mel Turner, runs a construction company specializing in historic buildings –and she happens to see ghosts on many of her jobsites – I wondered: what if she were hired to reconstruct a medieval monastery? And what if those ancient stones harbored a ghost, or even two?

Of course, rebuilding a monastery requires space, so I took Mel out of crowded
San Francisco and into Marin County, on the other side of the Golden Gate
Bridge. This county is full of rolling pastures, sloping hillsides, and redwood
forests; Mount Tamalpais and wetlands. It is also home to wealthy iconoclasts
such as George Lucas.

While doing research for the book, I simply had to go back and visit Hearst
Castle (and hang out by the underground pool) because, as an author, I’m willing
to do the really hard work ☺. I also learned out about a Hearst-imported
monastery that was rebuilt in Florida, and claims to be the oldest building in
the United States!

In KEEPER OF THE CASTLE, Mel finds herself the guest of a mysterious, extremely wealthy motivational speaker who has imported an entire Scottish monastery and plans to use the space as a retreat center. All she needs to do is rebuild it…unfortunately, it keeps falling down and then someone is found dead on site. But it’s a great opportunity…and as Mel would say: What could possibly go wrong?

About the Author

Juliet Blackwell is the New York Times bestselling author of the Witchcraft Mystery series, featuring a powerful witch with a vintage clothes store in San Francisco’s Haight-Ashbury. She also writes the Haunted Home Renovation Mystery series, about a failed anthropologist who reluctantly takes over her father’s high-end construction company…and finds ghosts behind the walls. As Hailey Lind, Blackwell wrote the Agatha-nominated Art Lover’s Mystery series, in which an ex-art forger attempts to go straight as a faux finisher. She is currently working on a novel about a woman who takes over her uncle’s locksmith shop in Paris, entitled The Paris Key. A former anthropologist and social worker, Juliet has worked in Mexico, Spain, Cuba, Italy, the Philippines, and France. Visit her on her website, join her on Facebook (JulietBlackwellAuthor) and on Twitter @JulietBlackwell.

Comments

1 comment posted.

Re: Juliet Blackwell | Hearst Castle Dreams

This sounds like an amazing book, and I'm very anxious to
read it. I'm not sure if I have the premise of the book
right, or if I'm giving you an idea for another book, but
this is what I was thinking. What if you took everything
from another building, to be built someplace else, and found
out that there was a stone, or a staircase, or some other
part of that room that was actually haunted, before it was
actually reassembled, or even after it was reassembled??
I'm sure the Hearst Castle is really something to see, and
your book is going to be something good to hunker down with
and read this upcoming Winter!! Congratulations and have a
great Holiday!!!
(Peggy Roberson 12:02pm December 3, 2014)

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