Strange Sites: Uncommon Homes & Gardens of the Pacific Northwest

Amazon.com Price: $24.95 (as of 05/05/2019 21:42 PST- Details)

Description

There is just one human impulse as old as the desire to build a house – the desire to decorate it.

From a house made entirely of embalming fluid bottles created by an ex-undertaker, to a miniature backyard Dodge City built by a devoted “Gunsmoke” fan, to a junk castle assembled from old bedsteads, metal fans, and washer parts for a fine arts doctoral project – these are probably the most uncommon homes and gardens found right through western Canada and the USA.

Meet probably the most individuals who created these weird but magnificent places: Tim Anderson, from Roundup, Montana, who erects his graceful pillars and whirligigs from scrap iron and is said to be directed by visions; Rasmus Petersen, of Redmond, Oregon, who immigrated from Denmark in 1906 to clear 300 acres of rock and forest and created an extensive rock garden with the by-product of his labours; and John Keziere, who hails from Esquimalt, BC, a former whaler and merchant marine who modelled his garage on Davey Jones’ locker.

This exuberantly illustrated book is a tribute to women and men in Alberta, British Columbia, Idaho, Oregon, Montana, Washington and the Yukon who have created domestic monuments which might be out at the margins. Strange Sites: Uncommon Homes and Gardens of the Pacific Northwest celebrates the creative spirit in us all, the spirit that defies the trends, the neighbours and the building codes to construct unique, joyous and very peculiar sites.

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