Downton Shabby: One American''s Ultimate DIY Adventure Restoring His Family''s English Castle
English
By (author): Hopwood DePree
HGTV meets Downton Abbey! A ready-for-TV storywith charm and humor in abundanceabout a Los Angeles producer who moves to England to save his ancestral castle from ruin.
A true delight...In this marvelous debut, film producer DePree leaves the Hollywood hills to resurrect his British ancestral home, a 50,000-square-foot estate in the English countryside. Readers are in for a treat.--Publishers Weekly (starred review)
Hollywood producer Hopwood DePree had been told as a boy that an ancestorwho he was named forhad left his familys English castle in the 1700s to come to America. One night after some wine and a visit to Ancestry.com, Hopwood discovered a photograph of a magnificent English estate with a familiar name: Hopwood Hall, a 60-room, 600-year-old grand manor on 5,000 acres. And with that, Hopwood DePrees life took an almost fairytale turn.
Hopwood Hall, in northwest England, was indeed his familys ancestral home. It had been occupied continuously by the Hopwood family for five centuries until the last remaining male heirs were killed in World War I. Since then, the Hall had fallen gradually into disrepair and was close to collapse. When Hopwood visited, he discovered trees growing in the chimneys, holes in the roof, and water sluicing down walls. It would take many millions to save the Hallmillions that Hopwood certainly didnt havebut despite the fact that he lived in Los Angeles and had no construction skills, Hopwood DePree came to a conclusion: He would save Hopwood Hall.
Downton Shabbythe name Hopwood coined for the glorious ruintraces Hopwood DePrees adventures as he gives up his life in Hollywood and moves permanently to England to save Hopwood Hall from ruin. But the task is far too big for one person, of course. Hopwood discovers that the Hall comes with an unforgettable cast of new neighbors he can call on for helpfrom the electrician whose mum had fond memories of working at the Hall to gruff caretaker Bob, and the local aristocrats who (sort of) come to accept Hopwood as one of their own. Together, as they navigate the trials and triumphs of trying to save an actual castle, Hopwood finds himself ever further from the security of his old life, but comes to realize that, actually, hes never been closer to home.
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