The Mercury News

HGTV’S ‘Good Bones’ star promotes inclusivit­y in new children’s book

- Marni JAMESON At home

I’ve always said that I do not see a line between where home life stops and home design begins. It’s all a blur to me. Mina Starsiak Hawk, the star of HGTV’S “Good Bones,” a home renovation show, and author of a new children’s book, “Built Together,” (Zonderkidz, $18.99) agrees, and has taken that viewpoint one step further.

The premise of her book is that whether building a house or building a family, the same principles should apply.

Stay with me.

In “Built Together,” adorably illustrate­d by Barbara Bongini, the little boy narrator wonders whether his mom and dad will need a hammer and nails to build a family, or maybe they’ll need a drill and monkey wrench, tile and grout, bricks and mortar, paint and brushes. Whatever the case, he wants to help.

Spoiler alert: He eventually learns the building blocks of a home are kindness, love, inclusivit­y and a feeling of welcomenes­s. “I wanted to show young readers that families come in all shapes and sizes — just like houses — and that’s great,” said Starsiak Hawk, 36, who with her mom, started a home renovation company called Two Chicks and a Hammer. “What matters about houses and families is that they both have a strong foundation.”

Though Starsiak Hawk — who lives in Indianapol­is with her husband, Steve, their 2-year-old son Jack, and 4-month-old daughter Charlie — has a pretty foursquare family, her family growing up was the oppo

site. Her parents divorced when she was age 3, and have been married a total of eight times (four marriages each). As a result, Starsiak Hawk has many stepparent­s, stepsiblin­gs, halfsiblin­gs, nieces and nephews.

As our young narrator, who is modeled after the author’s son, says, “I live with just my mom and dad and our three goofy dogs, but we have a super big family. I have six grandmas and grandpas, 10 uncles and aunts, five cousins, a bunch of step grandmas, step uncles and step cousins, and lots of friends who mom says might as well be family.”

“It’s important to teach our children that family is so much more than just mom, dad, two kids and a golden retriever,” Starsiak Hawk said when I got her on the phone to talk about homes inside and out. “Family is nuclear, extended, adopted, divorced, single-parent, surrogate, rescued and blended and it’s more than just blood. You build your village, which can include friends, pets and neighbors.”

As a serial home remodeler and the female lead in my own blended family, which now encompasse­s five adult children, two kids-in-law, four grandchild­ren and, collective­ly, eight dogs — thankfully not all under one roof — I am taking this little boy’s message to heart.

Here’s more of my conversati­on with Starsiak Hawk:

Q

What prompted you to write this book?

A

Mostly becoming a parent. While my family today looks pretty traditiona­l, the family I came from was far from the standard portrayed in books and movies when I was growing up. I realized how much those images shape how we see others and I wanted to get into little ears the message of how you can build your own family by playing off how you build a house.

Q

How did you get into home renovating and how did that lead to a TV show?

A

In 2007, after I graduated from college, I bought a house. My mom co-signed the loan. The house needed a lot more fixing than we expected and we did most of the work ourselves. We renovated the bathroom, then learned how to install kitchen cabinets and replace flooring. We kept going, and did other houses and started Two Chicks and a Hammer. Then a TV production company saw us on Instagram and that led to “Good Bones,” which is now in its seventh season.

Q

Besides needing a strong foundation, what other parallels do you see between families and houses?

A

My preferred mode for both would be inclusivit­y and acceptance, and that might mean relaxing some rules. I find working on homes governed by HOA rules, where the houses all have to look a certain way and can only be one of 10 colors, restrictiv­e. You might not like having a purple house on your street, or having neighbors with goats and chickens, but that’s my preference, and that goes along with saying, we don’t have to be related by blood to be family. Live and let live.

Q

What will “Good Bones” fans recognize in the pages of your new book?

A

It’s pretty clear that the book features my family: Steve, me, Jack and our three dogs. (Daughter Charlie came along after the book went off to production.) The house and front porch featured in the book are the spitting image of ours. Also, in the illustrati­ons: Some characters wear Two Chicks and a Hammer T-shirts.

Q

What do you hope children will learn from this book?

A

I hope they develop more open mindedness and see more options for what makes a family than I saw in movies and books growing up. And I hope they see that just like we can build a house, we can build our own family, too.

Marni Jameson is the author of six home and lifestyle books, including “Downsizing the Family Home What to Save, What to Let Go” and “Downsizing the Blended Home — When Two Households Become One,” and coming in June “What to Do With Everything You Own to Leave the Legacy You Want.” You may reach her at marnijames­on.com.

 ?? COURTESY OF MINA STARSIAK HAWK ?? HGTV’S “Good Bones” star Mina Starsiak Hawk with her husband, Steve, reads her new children’s book to son, Jack, 2, as daughter, Charlie, listens in.
COURTESY OF MINA STARSIAK HAWK HGTV’S “Good Bones” star Mina Starsiak Hawk with her husband, Steve, reads her new children’s book to son, Jack, 2, as daughter, Charlie, listens in.
 ??  ??
 ?? COURTESY OF ICON MEDIA GROUP ?? “Built Together,” a new children’s book by HGTV star of “Good Bones” Mina Starsiak Hawk, has inclusivit­y as its message.
COURTESY OF ICON MEDIA GROUP “Built Together,” a new children’s book by HGTV star of “Good Bones” Mina Starsiak Hawk, has inclusivit­y as its message.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States