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$19.00
Apr 12, 2005 | ISBN 9780812973617
Buy the Paperback:
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Praise
“[A] rambunctiously charming essay collection . . . as refreshing and bracing as a mint julep . . . Even the most hopeless Yankee will have no trouble getting in touch with her inner Poultry Princess.”
–Vogue
“[An] effervescent collection of essays . . . charming . . . amusing.”
–The New York Times Book Review
"Julia Reed is right on target about the South-its food, its hair, its guns, its pests, even the tendency of southern women to kill their husbands and get away with it. She’s clear-eyed, raucously funny, and a natural story teller, which makes her something of a southern phenomenon herself."
–John Berendt, author of Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil
“Julia Reed’s affectionate and hilarious observations of the Deep South and Southerners past and present are a delight to read.”
–Fannie Flagg, author of Standing in the Rainbow
“Julia Reed is a Southern original. Her writing is funny and addictive, blending the street smarts of Greenville, Mississippi, where ‘girls are taught to drink Scotch and smoke cigarettes and drive a car by the time they are twelve,’ with the sophistication of a globe-trotting journalist. Julia’s favorite subjects are Southern–fashion, politics, and above all food, which she describes with irresistable affection, knowledge and delight. If you’ve ever doubted that Southern food is our greatest gastronomic treasure, be prepared to learn the truth."
–Jeffrey Steingarten, author of It Must Have Been Something I Ate
"Queen of the Turtle Derby and Other Southern Phenomena will be a delight for all Southern readers (all about our favorite subject–us) and an educational tome for Unfortunate Others. It helps explain that We are, after all, just like Them–only funnier and better-looking."
–Jill Conner Browne, The Sweet Potato Queens’ Big-Ass Cookbook (and Financial Planner)
"I had some crab dip that Julia Reed made once that I would have eaten all of in one sitting, if I had been sitting, and if the other party guests hadn’t dragged me off of it. This book is that good."
–Roy Blount Jr., author of author of Crackers and If Only You Knew How Much I Smell You
“Not since Eudora Welty has anybody captured in such sophisticated, often mordant prose the brave, gracious, perverse, reckless, God-fearing Southern soul like Julia reed. Whether she’s holding forth on fried chicken and catfish, guns, booze, cockfights, pestilence, or Southern womanhood, Reed loads both barrels and never misses the target. As a Carolina Tarheel, I rejoiced, cringed, marveled, and laughed myself sick at Reed’s outrageous tales and savvy insights, and I defy anybody–Southerner and Yankee alike–to come up for are after reading the first chapter.”
–James Villas, author of Between Bites and My Mother’s Southern Kitchen
“This is a wise and tender book. Julia Reed is a loving defender of the South. Long may she live and write. She understands the deep seriousness that underlies our Scotch-Irish, English, and African roots."
–Ellen Gilchrist, author of I, Rhoda Manning, Go Hunting With My Daddy: And Other Stories
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