Monday, May 14, 2018

Finding Big Love in a Tiny House by Michael Ehret plus #Giveaway!!


Finding Big Love in a Tiny House

Michael is very graciously giving away two ebooks of his new book--please leave contact information. 

Samara, one of the key locations in my novella “Big Love” in the collection Coming Home: A Tiny House Collection (Penwrights Press) (https://www.amazon.com/Coming-Home-Tiny-House-Collection-ebook/dp/B072FGMV6V/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1504742246&sr=8-1&keywords=Michael+Ehret), is a real place. It’s about an hour and ten minutes north of me in West Lafayette, Indiana, just off I-65. It is one of the last houses architect Frank Lloyd Wright envisioned and had built in his Usonian style (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Usonia).
And I never knew it existed—until I needed it. In that sense, Samara (http://www.samara-house.org/) is rather like J.K. Rowling’s fictional creation, The Room of Requirement, in her Harry Potter series of novels. That room appears, stocked with whatever the magician requires at the moment, just as it is needed. And until it is needed, it cannot be found.
Only, as I said, Samara is real. You can visit it and I highly recommend you do.
In my novella, my architecturally-minded journalist and my as-independent-as-Yankee-Doodle small business woman who builds tiny houses for the homeless, needed a place they could explore together to deepen their relationship—and divide them.

This is the front approach and garden at Samara. The entrance, which Wright liked to hide in his creations, is just around the corner created by the bank of windows you see.
I knew I had to have this almost magical place where the natural attraction these two feel for each other could be easily intensified. It’s a novella, after all, there wasn’t a lot of time.
As I searched for the right location—I wanted a real one, not something made up—I knew Purdue University had a great school of civil engineering and that south of Indianapolis is the city of Columbus, renown for its architecture. So this got me thinking about what architectural marvels might be found in Indiana. I fully expected to make a road trip or two to Columbus for exploratory purposes.
But when I searched online for architecture in Indiana, I found this 2014 article (https://www.indianapolismonthly.com/news-opinion/milestones-an-indiana-architecture-road-trip/) from Indianapolis Monthly magazine: “Milestones: An Indiana Architecture Road Trip,” by Daniel S. Comiskey. As I read through the piece, the name “Samara” lit up like neon in my mind.










And the location in West Lafayette couldn’t have been more perfect. My journalist, Nathan “Rafe” Rafferty, lives in Chicago. My builder, Timberly “Berly” Charles, lives in Indianapolis. Connecting them is I-65 and almost exactly in the middle is—Samara.
You hear it too, don’t you? When you read “Samara,” doesn’t it sing? Don’t you almost hear HervĂ© Villechaize’s Tattoo calling out, “The house! The house,” as Ricardo Montalban’s Mr. Roark strolls nonchalantly onto the veranda?
A quick email to Linda Eales, Samara’s associate curator, secured a visit to the home for my wife and I. And yes, until very recently Samara was a home and a museum. The original owner, Purdue University professor John Christian, and his wife Catherine, lived in the home until their deaths. It is now operated by the John E. Christian Family Memorial Trust and is open to the public.
Here’s a bit of a scene from my character’s visit to Samara. In the living room of the house, Berly and Rafe experience the calming effects of the room’s architecture. The scene is in Berly’s point of view:
Wall-sized windows fill an entire side of this amazing great room that was created before the concept of great rooms. A line of cushioned benches underneath a wall of shelves for books and knickknacks extends into and around the corner of the library section of the room.
Linda talks about how the design, the integration of nature—“With a capital N as Wright would say”—and the unity of the lines in the house create a feeling of peace and relaxation today’s homes often don’t have.
[caption id="attachment_2877" align="alignright" width="300"]IMG_1165 The corner Wright called "the best seat in the house."[/caption]
She motions to the library’s distant corner. “Wright would have said that corner bench is the best seat in the house.”
I move into that corner to look at the amazing display of books and other decorative pieces on the shelves.
Rafe follows me. “Don’t you want to sit?”
“Oh, I couldn’t.” To me, this is a museum, and that means Do Not Touch. But Linda confirms Rafe’s invitation.
“No, it’s all right,” she says. “Dr. Christian lived in the home until his death in 2015. The furniture is intended to be used.”
So I do, and Rafe sits next to me. I am sitting on a piece of furniture designed by Frank Lloyd Wright.
“I’ll dim the lights,” Linda says. “That will help you feel the peace.”
As we sit there, in the quiet and in the natural light of a sunny Hoosier afternoon, a calm does descend. My breathing evens out, and my body relaxes. It’s the first time I’ve noticed how architecture can be used to create mood—and I love it. How can this be incorporated in our work at La Petite Maison?
Rafe rests his hand protectively over mine on the seat cushion between us. It scares me to even think about it, but I am beginning to wonder about the future with Rafe. Sitting next to him, I swear I hear some pieces of my life fall into place. I try to lean into the peace and enjoy it. I don’t find it often.
“What are you feeling?” he whispers in my ear, his warm breath accentuating his words.
What am I feeling? I can hardly tell him, now can I? I’m not even sure I could tell Bets, were she here. But I am feeling.
Just a short scene or two later, trouble descends in paradise and the comforts of Samara get lost as the characters… well, you’ll just have to read it!
And you can! I have two electronic copies to give away. Just leave a comment here. If you win and read “Big Love,” (and the other six tiny-house related stories), I’d be honored if you left a review on Amazon and/or Goodreads. Though a review is not required to enter, reviews give books a fighting chance to find an audience. Thanks in advance!

"Big Love" is one of seven novellas written around the theme of tiny houses. It is included in Coming Home: A Tiny House Collection from Penwrights Press. Available in e-book and print . Cover design by Ken Raney (http://kenraneyartandillustration.blogspot.com/). Visit me on Facebook (https://www.facebook.com/michael.l.ehret.7) or at my blog, Writing on the Fine Line. (https://writingonthefineline.com/)

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Michael Ehret loves to play with words and as the author of “Big Love,” a novella within Coming Home: A Tiny House Collection (https://www.amazon.com/Coming-Home-Tiny-House-Collection-ebook/dp/B072FGMV6V/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1507650693&sr=8-1&keywords=Michael+Ehret), he is enjoying his playground. Previous playgrounds include being the Managing Editor of the magazine ACFW Journal and the ezine Afictionado for seven years. He also plays with words as a freelance editor and has edited several nonfiction books, proofedited for Abingdon Press, worked in corporate communications, and reported for The Indianapolis Star.

8 comments:

Marilyn R. said...

Interesting history and pictures in this post with Michael Ehret. Coming Home sounds like a fun read like the post was. Thank you for the giveaway opportunity.
marilynridgway78[at]gmail[dot]com

Michael Ehret said...

Well, I certainly think it is a fun read, Marilyn! Not that I'm partial, oh no! Plus, there are six other novellas in the collection. Each one incorporating a tiny house in some fashion. Very fun.

Unknown said...

I love the picture on the cover, also the pictures posted. I have been in a F. L. Wright home. He certainly does create in an interesting way. Thanks for the opportunity to enter this giveaway.

Michael Ehret said...

Marilyn, I agree. Wright was unique ... and a little obsessive. For Samara, he dictated everything that came in the home: Dishes, tablecloths, bed spreads, everything ... and designed most of it himself. But the tour is fascinating and full of those little details. I highly recommend touring the home.

Kimmy said...

Looks like a great read can't wait ! Thanks kim.vizzini@gmail.com

lollipops said...

Conratulations to the two Marilyns. :D

Marilyn R. said...

Thank you!

Anonymous said...

Thank yiou.

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