Every Town Needs A Castle - by Dwayne Hunn      
      If, like the author you've lived in Cleveland, Chicago, New York, Mumbai, Claremont, St. John, Sacremento, or San Francisco, you've seen Knight Nader attack political fortresses. So, If Ralph places your first book, Ordinary People Doing the Extraordinary, on his 2009 Top Ten Books to Read List, why write your second on Prince Philip's favorite junkyard, California's Rubelian Castle, forged from junk piled 76 feet high by a band of phunny pharmers for  no monetary gain in the midst of exclusive suburbia. 
      Every Town Needs A Castle, Especially if Made of Recycled Junk and Spunk, is filled with pictures and art (80+) depicting zany building baffles, amazes, and inspires; old-timers' homespun wisdoms needed again today; and hands-on adventure takes that are weakly replaced today with IPOD'd ventures. 
      This is a book for kids, because Rubelia's King was a kid who never grew up; for builders, especially those who build differently; for story lovers, for it presents several wonderful story tellers; for quixotic dreamers, because this Don and his Sanchos tilt with everything while building windmills and crazy stuff; for budding leaders, travelers, and doers, because it reveals how the benevolent Rubelian Ruler developed his unique public policy perspectives. 
      Order this book directly from the author. 
        
        
       
        
       One 
        Man's Dream - The Spirit of Rubel Castle
  Available from Amazon. 
      You can 
        get an autographed copy instead, sent without shipping charges from the 
        author himself. 
        Dave 
        Traversi dct@svn.net, (707) 762-3866. 
      Also at some Barnes 
        and Nobles and at the Village Book Shop in Glendora. 
      Dec. 
        3-9, 2003 
  There 
    is a magical castle built in the midst of an exclusive residential section 
    of Glendora, California. 
  It was 
    created by a man who had the same dream as William Randolph Hearst, but lacked 
    the resources to accomplish it. 
  It is 
    even more unusual because it was built almost entirely from left-overs; things 
    like abandoned railroad tracks, timbers used in the construction of freeways, 
    hundreds of thousands of tons of alluvial rocks from the San Gabriel Mountains 
    and an endless supply of abandoned steel, cable, and bottles. 
  This was 
    the work of Michael Rubel and his band of volunteers called The Pharm Hands. 
  It was 
    arguably the first major recycling project in the United States and was the 
    materialization of his lifelong dream. 
  Michael 
    Rubel is not a conformist; in fact, he might be labeled a throwback. 
  The Castle 
    was his primary life's work, requiring twenty-eight years for its completion. 
      Michael 
        came by his heritage of non-conformity from his 
        parents, having a mother who performed for five years on Broadway 
        in the Ziegfeld Follies, as well as on her own with such famous stars 
        as Fanny Brice, W.C. Fields, and Jack benny. His father was a Episcopalian 
        Minister as well as a gag writer and performing partner for the famous 
        radio comedian, Joe Penner. Throw in a grandfather who was a classmate 
        of Herbert Hoover, and taught Michael a philosphy of life which he summed 
        up as, "Blessed be our imagination - it makes life a toy." 
  The construction 
    started with a two-million gallon concrete reservoir and now boasts towers 
    which stand seventy-five feet tall, battlements with cannons (real cannons) 
    for protection, blacksmith shop, weaving and stained glass shops, and medievel 
    living accommodations for Michael and his wife. 
  The entire 
    Castle is built of river rock and concrete. For 
    the most part, it was all done without money, relying on volunteer help and 
    donated or liberated materials. 
  It is 
    beyond anything the imagination can conceive and it attracts thousands of 
    visitors a year, all of whom would welcome a written history of the spectacle 
    they have witnessed. 
  The story 
    of its construction is compelling. It was accomplished entirely without plans 
    or building permits of any kind, with constant harassment from city officials 
    who wanted Michael ousted from the two and one-half acre compound. They 
    even took him to court where he was jailed and threatened for failure to cease 
    construction. But even more fascinating is the humor which permeated this 
    project, for Michael, the Pharm Hands and Grandfather were masters of the 
    art of hoaxing and practical joking. The 
    victims of these ongoing humorous pranks was almost always the officialdom 
    threatening them. 
  But the 
    project had the support of most of the city's residents who loved the Rubel 
    family, and therein lies the source of Michael's power of oppositional politics. 
    The 
    story is magical because of the willingness of the Pharm Hands to not only 
    believe in Michael's dream of building a castle, but to join in the pursuit 
    of the dream with a determination which would not be discouraged, all 
    despite the fact that they could not really visualize what it was they were 
    doing. 
  This is 
    the truly captivating element of Rubelia, the name commonly used to describe 
    the Castle, and its history: the special quality Michael possesses inspiring 
    everyone to join in his dream. 
      The 
        tale is inspirational; telling the story of a man who went his own way 
        in life, who refused to accept that he must conform to society's norms. 
       
      For 
        more informational pages about the castle, see The 
        Shriek. 
      FILM
          AT RUBEL CASTLE 
      Huell 
        Howser also covered the castle 
        about ten years ago. It is one of the favorite Huell videos. 
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