Fans of home-improvement TV know Nicole Curtis as the hands-on blonde of "Rehab Addict." But her road to becoming a design and media star has been paved with struggles and setbacks along with successes, chronicled in her new book: "Better Than New: Lessons I've Learned From Saving Old Homes (And How They Saved Me)" (Artisan, $27.95).
In eight chapters, each focused on a house, starting with her first Florida fixer-upper, the Detroit native shares her unvarnished personal journey — from Hooters waitress to struggling single mom, through relationships good and bad — to her complicated life today. "Some women — what I used to think of as 'normal women' — color their hair when they need a change," she writes. "Some get a manicure or buy new clothes. I buy a house."
We talked with Curtis about her grandmother, mall bangs and why she left Minneapolis.
Q: How and why did you come to write a book?
A: I wanted to write a memoir, so I put the word out there, and wrote a sample chapter. I had no interest in writing a design book. That's kind of boring to me. Everyone on TV writes a design book. ... People want more of the details of my homes. ... People are always asking me questions, and telling me their stories. ... "We feel so stupid. We lost our house." Things work out so well on TV but not in real life.
Q: What was your process for writing? Did you use a coach or ghostwriter?
A: When we started, it wasn't chronological. It was a completely different book six months ago. After Gram [her grandmother, to whom the book is dedicated] passed away, I hunkered down and changed it all. ... I'm old-school. I was taking my book to Kinko's every couple of days and printing it out.
I wrote it the way I write for social media. But it has to go through so many hands. The editor takes things out, like when I referred to Terminal G22 at the Minneapolis airport. They took it out, but I said, "It doesn't sound like I talk. I would say G22." It reads like it's off the pages of my social media.