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School of Music

Michael Barera, CC BY-SA 4.0 <https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0>, via Wikimedia Commons
Michael Barera, CC BY-SA 4.0, via Wikimedia Commons. Size Optimized.

In the previous post I described how Baits Housing plays a defining role in students’ life on North Campus, which is anchored by College of Engineering, the Department of Architecture and Urban Planning and — last but not the least — the School of Music. Officially known as Earl V. Moore School of Music, Theatre and Dance, the prestigious department has produced such famous alumni as Arthur Miller, James Earl Jones, Lucy Liu and Madonna. The school is nestled among groves of pines and maples at the foot of Baits hills. In the rear of the building is a small lake bordering several grassy fields. The shape of the lake/water fountain was designed to resemble a grand piano, with the building’s narrow windows serving as its keys. Hence, the affectionate nickname Piano Pond.

Readers will find an aerial view of the school and its vicinity here. If you look close enough, you’ll find hidden in the heavy foliage a sloping footpath linking Baits to Earl Moore below — a secluded place for lovers whose bunkmates wouldn’t take the hint and leave the room.

Baits on the Hill

In the novel Huron’s Bend the protagonist Kodi Auyang lives in Smith House, right next to Parker House where his love interest Jordan Blythe calls home. The residence halls are two buildings within the 10-house dormitory complex in the University of Michigan’s North Campus in Ann Arbor. Built in the 60’s to exclusively house graduate students, the two to three-storied sandstone colored dorms, named after Vera Burridge Baits, a member of the Board of Regents, are strung across acres of wooded hillocks. Autumn around Baits is marked by shades of yellow, burnt orange and red from sugar, silver and Norway maples. The spring? Dazzling white and pink crabapple blossoms stretching down the streets as far as eye can see. I stayed in Smith house for two years. Through the tiny window in my single room, I could see at the bottom of the hill Earl Moore Music School and the mystic Piano Pond, both barely a stone’s throw away.

Because of its proximity to several university departments Baits’ tenants were an eclectic mix of music, architecture and engineering majors. Being grad students they tended to keep to themselves — a stark contrast to the nearby undergrad dorm Bursley, where ear-popping Metallica that easily registered on seismographs played on all hours of the day (and night.) But the serene atmosphere also yielded many interesting encounters among people who lived there. Huron’s Bend is loosely based on one such romantic story.

A few years ago the University, in its infinite wisdom, opted to designate Baits as undergraduate housing. Some time later, half of the Baits complex was shut down due to high cost of renovation. The mystique of Vera Baits halls, where tech and art mingled and where intellectual pursuit never got in the way of sweet romance, has since gone forever.

Origin Story

I was born in the picturesque city of Chiayi on the west coast half way between the northern and southern tips of Taiwan. As a teenager I survived the first 10 years of the somewhat draconian Taiwanese K12 education system. My family and I then followed the footsteps of my father, who had earlier come to the States for graduate school. We lived a short time in a rental townhouse in Mt. Clemens, a suburb about an hour drive north of Detroit, before moving permanently to a small rambler nearby. With a baby brother as a new addition to our brood, the place was way too crowded for the six of us. But we managed. Soon I’d go off to college, spent a brief stint at University of Illinois at Champaign-Urbana for my Masters degree in Electrical Engineering, and eventually a doctorate in Computer Science from the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor.

My personal story isn’t all that different from those of many immigrants to America. If there were anything to set mine apart a tiny bit, it would be my penchant for locking myself in a room and hacking away at really long stories — tales either based on my personal experience after spending near a decade in the ivory tower or something straight out of figments of my imagination. The interested reader may find my first book, Blinded by the Light, a science fiction novel about a Homeland Security agent in hot pursuit of a terrorist hell-bent on triggering an apocalypse, and my new book The Huron’s Bend about two star-crossed lovers bound by their shared passion for language.

Old family photo. Author is the one in green shirt at far left.

The Huron’s Bend Book Cover Design

It takes a good book cover for a book to get noticed.  Because, let’s face it, we’re all too caught up in our daily lives to give any book more than a glancing look.  The cover on The Huron’s Bend was designed by Hector Trunnec.  I’m very happy with his work–on time, with good art and at a reasonable price.  If you’re interested in illustrations, comics or whatever art that strikes your fancy, he can be reached at:

https://www.instagram.com/hectortrunnec/

https://www.facebook.com/TrunnecsArt

http://www.behance.net/Trunnec

The above image is from his portfolio.  I hope he doesn’t mind my using it to promote his work.

The book cover depicts the female protagonist sitting by the bank of the Huron as a meteor shower rains down the night sky.