They said the land did not have an address. They were right.
When Angela Irizarry, her husband, and their son bought ten acres of raw Florida scrub for a price so low she checked three times to make sure it was not a typo, she thought the hard part was over. She was wrong. The hard part had not even started.
No well. No septic. No power. Dirt road access the county maintained, but not very well. And no address, which meant the land did not exist in any system that required one. Which, as she would learn over the next eighteen months, was every system.
What followed was a crash course in rural bureaucracy, contractor roulette, and the particular madness of building a house from nothing in a county that seemed determined to stop her at every turn. Permits were denied. Applications were rejected. TWO hurricanes hit mid-build. Her father died six days after the septic went in. The plumber worked on the Fourth of July. The gutter installer got pulled over for driving on a suspended license. The passion flowers she tried to protect got crushed by an excavator and came back stronger than anything else on the property.
Roots and Red Tape is the true story of what it actually takes to build a home from raw land: the money, the mistakes, the grief, the stubbornness, and the moments of impossible beauty that make you realize the land was never fighting you. It was testing whether you deserved it.
This is not a how-to book. This is a what-it-costs book. And the cost is not always measured in dollars.









