MOAB — Looking for a change of address? Looking for a way to connect to the colorful characters who have passed through Utah? Looking for a place for inspiration to write that best seller you've never quite gotten around to?
You are in luck.
Edward Abbey's old Moab home is for sale.
This is not to be confused with his first residence in the Moab area, the one-room trailer he lived in as a summer ranger at Arches National Park circa 1956.
This is the place south of town at 2240 Spanish Valley Drive that he bought nearly 20 years later, in 1974, and lived in, on and off, through 1978, when he moved back to Tucson, Ariz.
It was here that he lived after marrying his fourth wife, Renee'. It was here where he threw the big party when he turned 50. It was here that he wrote "The Monkey Wrench Gang."
I learned that the 2,800-square-foot house is on the market from a solid, unimpeachable source in Moab — the Southeast Utah Real Estate Happenings magazine, which I picked up at a gas station:
"Charming 4 bed/2 bath home on 1.41 ac, huge fireplace, wood floors, fabulous views, former home of Edward Abbey, $290,000, Call Penelope."
I called Penelope Butterfield, the friendly Realtor handling the sale.
She said the house has been on the market since spring. So yes, the down economy has slowed down everything, including houses Edward Abbey once lived in.
Not even Tim DeChristopher has made an offer.
But that doesn't mean there isn't interest.
I talked to Terry Caine, the current owner, and she said people will knock on the door just to satisfy their curiosity.
"They don't want to buy, but they ask if they can come in and look," she said. "I say, 'Sure, come on in.' "
Terry didn't know Edward Abbey. She bought the house seven years ago after it was vacant for several years. All she knows is that the famed author and environmental activist, who died in 1989 at the age of 62, once lived where she lives now.
Laura Lee Houck has a much clearer recollection. Laura Lee still lives in the next house north on Spanish Valley Drive, where she moved in 1977 and instantly became good friends with her neighbors, the Abbeys.
There were fewer houses 30 years ago, and people, and Laura Lee is prone to nostalgia when she talks about it.
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