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An Author's Sweet Retreat
From the Winter 2008 Issue



Where does a world-famous author go when summer starts to overheat? For Sandra Brown, the answer is simple: a Hansel-and-Gretel cottage in the heart of North Carolina’s mountains. Exotic? No. Just a place she fell in love with at first sight.

The Browns' cottage has an almost fairy-tale quality that prompted author Sandra Brown to fall in love with it at first sight.

She’s not exactly a fantasy writer.

Still, renowned mystery author Sandra Brown got her own fairy-tale moment three years ago when she saw a charming cabin in Highlands in Western North Carolina. And though the event lacked a bit of suspense, it did have its own share of drama.

“We fell in love with the area when we were invited up there several times as guests and our host was developing Highgate,” she recalls. “He [Finley Merry] called one night and suggested we come and look at this house. I went, not expecting to buy it, but when we saw it, we fell in love with it.”

One of the big perks to being a major writer – Brown is the author of more than 60 novels, 55 of which made The New York Times best seller list – is the fact that you can live anywhere in the world you want.

"Absolutely mountain style," Brown says of her home with its master bedroom that displays traditional log and beam features.

That includes a summer home in the prestigious Highlands-Cashiers area.

Unlike her books, however, there’s no mystery about the area’s attraction for Brown and husband Michael.

“We love the mountains, the cooler temperatures in the summer and the foliage in the fall,” she says. “It’s just such a charming community and there was nothing about it we disliked.”

Living The Dream
Born in Waco, Texas and raised in Ft. Worth, Brown attended Texas Christian University and worked as a television reporter at KLTV in Tyler, a reporter on “PM Magazine,” a model in Dallas, and a weathercaster for Dallas’ WFAA-TV. Her husband, a former television anchorman and award-winning documentary producer, challenged her to write a novel and pursue her dream of becoming a writer.

She decided to do just that after she was fired from her job in 1976.

Mother of two grown children, Rachel and Ryan, she began her writing career in 1981. Since then she has published 68 novels, some under pseudonyms, and today lives primarily in Arlington, Texas.

But for part of the time, home is the house in Highlands.

“In the course of a year, we probably stay there eight weeks all together,” she says, “mostly in summer. Then we come back in fall and spend another week or so at the house in the spring.”

This handsome rustic gazebo makes a perfect spot for summertime meals at the Brown home, which the couple use for family get-togethers with their children and grandchildren.

All In The Family
Lots of things happen at the Browns’ summer place: Fun. Relaxation. And special occasions.

“We use the home for family get-togethers with the children and grandchildren [the couple has three grandsons, including an infant],” she says, “and Michael and I like to go there to get away from our offices and just take it easy.”

But how easy can she take it when, as an incredibly prolific writer, she turns out an astounding average 2.6 books a year? And, while her home at Highlands may be a resting place, it’s seen its share of literary creation. The truth is Brown works at a near non-stop pace. The exception: when she’s in New York for business or on the road.

“I don’t write when I travel,” she says. “Travel is usually for other kinds of business or pleasure.”

A Perfect Match
It’s no accident that the house at Highlands captured Brown’s heart at first glance.

The home's defining feature is the enormous great room, a 30 x 33-foot area big enough for the whole family's activities.

Built by developer and friend Finley Merry to promote his Highgate community, The Lodge, as it was dubbed, was used as a charity show house that featured the work of top Atlanta designers. Once the project was finished, however, Merry’s wife Charlotte lent her own creative talents to the décor. At that point, Merry, who had built the Browns’ home in Hilton Head, S. C. 12 years before, called the couple for a look-see.

The result: an easy, no-effort sale and acquisition.

“We knew we liked their stuff,” Brown notes, “and it was move-in ready when we got it.”

Definitely a mountain house, The Lodge is constructed of native stone, c. 1850s hand-hewn log walls and a tin roof. Rustic and comfortable in nature, the interior is filled with matching-themed furnishing: large pieces with happy fabrics, touches of leather and English pine antiques.

“It’s absolutely mountain style,” Brown notes, “and it blends into the setting perfectly. It’s very private, and we love the the outdoor living area with its fireplace. We grill out there.”

Spanning approximately 3,700 square feet, the home’s main feature is its great room, an enormous 30 x 33-foot expanse.

“This is where we do most of our living,” says Brown. ”Everything opens to this one giant room and that makes it a great family house. Everybody can be doing something different but we can all be in the same area.”

Easy Living Space
The home’s first floor includes the great room, kitchen, master suite, study/TV room, guest room and three baths, including his and her baths in the master plus the guest bath and powder room. Two more bedrooms and baths occupy the second floor.

Completing the living space is the guest cottage, a charming structure with mini-kitchen with wet bar and microwave, two bedrooms and two baths.
Today’s version is the second incarnation of the cottage, which was destroyed by lightning in February 2006. Replacing the original took nearly 15 months but was worth the work and trouble.

“We duplicated the plan and Finley did the reconstruction,” Brown says. “The exterior wasn’t damaged that much, but inside, the walls, infrastructure and under the eaves had to be put back together. We took up the flooring – a special plank flooring that wasn’t damaged – and they [the work crew] saved it.”

Now, with things back to normal, Michael enjoys operating Michael Brown Video Production Co. from his office in the cottage, while the non-stop author relaxes in the great room, watches shows in the TV room or works in “a little tiny room off the master that I turned into my writing office.”

If she runs true to form, Brown may just make it the scene of inspiration for her next best seller.


Builder's Corner

"We knew we liked their stuff," Brown says of Finley Merry and his wife Charlotte. Merry also built the Browns' home at Hilton Head, S.C.

A veteran builder and developer, Finley Merry has been in the housing industry for four decades.

The developer of Highgate in Highlands, he was formerly a full-time resident of Augusta, Ga., mainly working in commercial real estate with some residential and construction interests, including building most of the homes at Highgate.

At his North Carolina development, which he bought in 1998, Merry built The Lodge as “a speculative venture to promote Highgate,” a community of 62 homesites. The home, comprised of three log cabins with some 150-year-old logs, was found and dismantled in Tennessee, then reassembled at Highgate, an effort that more than suited builder Merry, who admits he loves to work with old materials.

The unique design, created by Atlanta architect Jack Davis, was then turned into a 2001 showhouse, which drew “the very top designers from Atlanta,” and dramatically increased traffic at the community.

“I used the house as a showhouse to benefit charities in The Highlands area,” Merry recalls, “then it went on the market.”

Eventually, he called Sandra Brown.

“The Browns had bought a house from me at Hilton Head,” he says,“ and we had become friends. They had visited us here in the Highlands and seemed to like the area.

“At the time I called, I was doing some renovation to the house. My wife and I bought a great deal of the furniture and had had stenciling done to the floors in two rooms.”

The finished result was stunning. “The main house runs about 3,700 square feet with the accompanying guest house about 1,100 square feet,” says Merry. “It’s made from old barn board and rusted tin for the roofs. Both houses have a number of fireplaces of stacked stone and we used old logs for decorative beams.

“The living room (great room) is certainly the most distinctive feature.

Originally, it was a living room and porch but I thought it should be bigger, so now it has lots of room: 30 x 33 feet with 20-foot ceilings that start at 16 feet.”

Topping it off are bold splashes of color and greenery by landscape artist Mary Palmer Dargan in keeping with the project. The result?

“It’s very much a cottage,” Merry maintains.

With exposure in multiple national magazines including Veranda and Southern Accents, Merry today enjoys a different lifestyle.

“I still have my house in Augusta,” he says, “but I spend the bulk of my time at the Highlands home.” –NVL

 





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