A novel property
Stunning Texas mansion that inspired literary legend books $4 million price
An Austin home that just hit the market for nearly $4 million comes with a Texas-sized tale.
Inside the 5,651-square-foot Mount Bonnell mansion, Pulitzer Prize-winning author James Michener researched and wrote his epic novel Texas in the early 1980s. The book was published in 1985.
Three years before Texas was released, Texas Governor Bill Clements urged Michener to relocate to Austin to pen the novel. Michener accepted the invitation. The author rented the mansion at 3506 Mount Bonnell Rd. from Jack Taylor, a UT professor, for $1 a year.
Michener died in 1997 at age 90 in Austin and was buried at the Texas State Cemetery, which is in East Austin. Michener was UT’s Jack G. Taylor Centennial Professor Emeritus and namesake of the famed Michener Center for Writers.
“The house was much different back then, with an indoor pool and a much different floor plan, but Michener wrote the story with views of Lake Austin as his inspiration,” says Darin Walker, an Austin agent with Kuper Sotheby’s International Realty who has the $3,995,000 listing.
Today, the mansion features five bedrooms, five full bathrooms, two half-bathrooms, a 2,500-bottle wine cellar, a resort-style pool and spa, a gym, an office, a home theater, and a two-car attached garage.
“Mount Bonnell has been an Austin landmark since the 1850s, but what sets this home apart is its unique position farther south from Covert Park,” Walker says. “The home sits farther out over the cliff and captures views of a sweeping bend in Lake Austin, allowing you to see so much more and from every living space throughout the house.”
You’ve got to wonder what the walls would say if they could speak, given that Michener spent a great deal of time at the mansion toiling over Texas.
“Every morning at 7:30 he sat down at his typewriter and stayed there until midday. He would write, re-write, edit, and write again (he always scoffed at writers who said they never revised what they first wrote), and then take a break for lunch and perhaps a short nap,” the state cemetery’s Michener bio says. “His afternoons were spent reading, talking, walking, traveling, attending functions, and experiencing life.”
The product of that labor was a more than 1,000-page novel about the Lone Star State. Michener’s “monumental saga” chronicles the four-and-a-half century history of Texas, publisher Penguin Random House says.
“Among his finely drawn cast of characters, emotional and political alliances are made and broken, as the loyalties established over the course of each turbulent age inevitably collapse under the weight of wealth and industry,” Penguin Random House says. “With Michener as our guide, Texas is a tale of patriotism and statesmanship, growth and development, violence and betrayal — a stunning achievement by a literary master.”