The Breeze Inn–in Better Homes & Gardens
Thanks all for your sweet, charming, funny, bittersweet memories of your own best summer ever. If it were up to me, everybody would get a free copy of SUMMER AT TIFFANY. Unfortunately, almost nothing is up to me. However, J. Fishler and MamaD, you failed to leave me email addresses, so if you’re still out there, please send me your email address AND your snailmail addy at MaryKayAndrews@aol.com. You other three, I’ll contact you, and we’ll get your books out ASAP. Thanks for playing!
Do you remember the best summer of your life? Marjorie Hart does. The year was 1945 and the war was still on, and she and her best friend, Marty were fresh from the Kappa house at The University of Iowa when they came up with the idea of travelling by train to New York to look for summer jobs at the leading department stores of the day. But when they failed to get jobs there, a serendipitous connection from back in Iowa landed them jobs as pages at Tiffany’s, where they become the first females ever to work on the sales floor. Outfitted in store-provided Tiffany-blue shirtwaist dresses from Bonwit-Teller, the plucky girls managed to live on their $20 weekly salaries by budgeting nickels for subway fares and quarters for automat sandwiches. At work, they brush shoulders with mobsters and celebrities like Marlene Dietrich and Judy Garland, and in their off hours they dance the night away at nightclubs with handsome midshipmen, and experience their first glimpse of the ocean at Jones Beach. And of course, they are living history, hearing of the combat deaths of loved ones from back home and the dropping of the first atomic bomb. They join the celebratory throngs celebrating V-J Day in Times Square and manage to glimpse General Eisenhower during his victory parade.
More than forty years later, now retired from a career as a professional cellist and college arts administrator living in San Diego, Marjorie Hart set out to write her memoir for her children and grandchildren. Serendipitously, she met an editor at a writer’s workshop who saw gold in Marjorie’s account of her diamond-studded summer of 1945. And at the age of 82, Marjorie saw her memoir, SUMMER AT TIFFANY, published.
Moms and daughters are a subject I’ve written about often over the space of my 17 published novels. In my Callahan Garrity novels, which I wrote under my real name, which is Kathy Hogan Trocheck, Callahan lived with her mom, Edna Mae, who was named after my own grandmother, Edna May Rivers Waymire, and modeled after my own mom, who was, like Edna, a chain-smoking, ice tea-drinking, solitaire-playing take-no-prisoner type. Other mothers I’ve written about bear no resemblance to my own mom. There was the closet alcoholic (and terrible cook) Marian Foley, in SAVANNAH BLUES, SAVANNAH BREEZE AND BLUE CHRISTMAS. The mom in HISSY FIT was missing in action, and the mom in DEEP DISH left annoying voicemail messages for Regina Foxton. In THE FIXER UPPER, I created Dempsey Killebrew’s mom, Lynda, a free-spirited divorcee who makes jewelry from roadside detritus and insists that all of Dempsey’s problems could be solved with some highlights and a new pair of shoes.
I love to write about mother-daughter relationships, both the good and the bad. I was blessed to have a wonderful relationship with my own mother, the late, great, Sue Waymire Hogan, who was larger-than-life. We were different in so many ways, but alike in the ways that count. If I’ve been successful at all as a wife, mother, and now, grandmother, it’s probably because of her influence. (And my Dad’s, but that’s a subject for Father’s Day). Mom believed I could do absolutely anything. No hare-brained nutty idea I had about my future as a writer was too far-fetched for her. She loved to give advice–to anybody who would listen. Some of her best advice over the years? Never order tuna salad in a hamburger joint. Always make a friend, if you have the chance. Never date a man who chases or hits. What’s the best advice your mom ever gave you?
Speaking as a mother, and now a grandmother, I feel that I can write with some authority about what mothers DON’T WANT for Mother’s Day. Recently, for instance, Mr. Mary Kay passed along a helpful email ad from an outfit called Golfsmith, that was suggesting any mother would be dee-lighted with a Mother’s Day gift of monogrammed golf balls. Er, no. Hay-yull no! Ditto the idea of giving Mom a new vacuum cleaner, Crockpot or steam iron. Unless, of course, the mother in your life has been dropping major hints that her heart’s desire actually is a new Lady Maytag, or whatever.In that case, you might want to ask yourself why your mother still views herself as a household drone. Just sayin’…
If you are blessed enough to still have a mother or grandmother (or dear aunt or mom stand-in) I hope you’ll find something wonderful and thoughtful as a gift–including the gift of time. Failing that, what about a book? Hmm. Maybe a book by….wait on it…Mary Kay Andrews? Being the thoughtful Mom I am, I’d like to help out my readers by offering signed bookplates for all my fans. If you’d like to give an autographed copy of one of my books to your mother, daughter, or any other special woman in your life this Mother’s Day, send an e-nail to meg@marykayandrews.com, with MOTHER’S DAY BOOKPLATES in the subject line. In your message tell us the quantity you’d like to receive–(limit 5 per person) and the snail mail address where the bookplates should be mailed. The postage is my treat. Requests must be received by midnight, Sunday, May 2 so we can get them in the mail to you in time to turn your old favorite–or newly purchased MKA novel into signed copies.
I’ve got a busy few weeks coming up. There’s that pesky deadline thing, of course. And I’m writing, I really am. But I have some long-standing commitments to get to first. For instance, this weekend, I’m headed up to Yellow Springs, Ohio to help celebrate the 25th anniversary of the Antioch Writer’s Workshop.
Twenty years ago, I was a totally frustrated, pissed-off newspaper reporter. I wanted to write fiction, and be a stay-at-home mom to my two children. Katie was eight and Andrew was four. My husband was tired of hearing me bitch and moan about my mean editors. So I did something. I started writing a mystery. One night a week, I’d sneak back to the newspaper office and write on their computer, which was a big no-no, which made me want to do it even more. Subversive streak, you see? I finished that first mystery,and sent it out to thunderous silence. Then I saw an ad in the back of WRITER’S DIGEST magazine, for a writer’s workshop in a place I’d never heard of, Yellow Springs, in a state I’d never been to, Ohio. Sue Grafton, who was my total mystery author hero, was giving a class at the Antioch Writer’s Workshop. And for like, fifty bucks or something, you could have her critique your manuscript. I was so there!
In July of 1990, I used up all my frequent flyer miles and my last week of vacation, and flew up to Ohio. Antioch College, it turns out, was this hippy-dippy little liberal arts school, and Yellow Springs was the totally chill college town, where, instead of having a town drunk, they had a town stoner, sitting on the curb across the street from Weavers Supermarket. Coolest of all, though, was Sue Grafton, who gave a three or four hour workshop every night for a week. That workshop changed my life. I went in a wannabe and came out a WRITER. I had my manuscript conference with Sue, who was incredibly encouraging about my finished novel, telling me I was ready to find an agent and a publisher. Later that week, I read the first chapter of a new book I’d started to the workshop attendees, and afterwards, Sue told me that book would be published. Less than four months later, I had a book contract for EVERY CROOKED NANNY with HarperCollins Publishers.
In May of 1991, I gave my notice at the Atlanta Journal-Constitution, and in 1992, my first book was published. And I’ve never looked back. I’ve been back to the AWW several times since 1990, a couple of times to teach at the workshop, most memorably, in 2000, when Sue Grafton came back to teach, and I was on that same faculty, and again, to be the AWW keynote speaker, which was a huge honor. In the 20 years since I first travelled to that hippy-dippy college town, I’ve made lots of friends in the writing community there, including my dear junk buddy Barb, at whose home I stayed on my first trip back to AWW, and on every trip since. Oh, and I’ve also had 17 novels published.
I’ll fly up to Dayton with a half-empty suitcase early Friday, so that Barb, and my hometown friend Sue and I can have a whole day of Ohio junking before I give my talk at the AWW celebration. Have I mentioned how much I love Ohio junk? They have AWESOME junk in Ohio. I’m looking forward to seeing my book club and writer friends in Yellow Springs, and also to tip-toeing over to Young’s Jersey Dairy Barn for some of their home-churned ice cream.
I come home from Ohio on Sunday, and then on Tuesday, Mr. Mary Kay and I are flying to San Francisco, where he has a two-day meeting. Then it’s on to Sonoma, and some wine-sipping, and hopefully, more junking. Although my chick trip friends and I were just in Sonoma in November, there was no time for junking. This trip, it’s different. I have already warned MMK that there WILL BE junk stops. And I’d appreciate any junk tips anybody has to offer for junking in Northern California next weekend. I’m totally bummed that we have to fly home early Sunday, and I’ll miss the Alameda Point show, so, somebody give me the 411!
You must understand, though, that I did not come from a gardening people. My father was first generation Irish-American, and he grew up a city kid, on the Southside of Chicago. My mother was a city kid too, although there must have been some farmers somewhere in her middle-American background. Essentially, my people were talkers, dreamers, jokers, and bon vivants. Neither of my parents had much talent or interest in gardening, and it showed, since we generally had the raggediest yard in the neighborhood. My Dad could and did kill even the hardiest grass, and my mother just wanted to be in the air-conditioning with a good book and a glass of instant Nestea.
Mr. Mary Kay’s people, of East European extraction, were fishermen originally, although his parents were also city kids. His mother loved plants and had some success with roses, but his family yard wasn’t especially scenic, either.
Still, we’ve always piddled around with gardening. And by we, I mean, he. He is the one who toils endlessly over the lawn, fertilizing, seeding, re-seeding and aerating. I love the idea of gardening. I really do. But I seem to have some kind of magical attraction to bugs, who will fly hundreds of miles to bite me. And then my back hurts and I get big itchy welts and I say the hell with it and go back inside to a good book and some home-brewed iced tea. See? I have evolved a little.
My role in our gardening drama these days is to go to the garden shop, pick out some pretty plants, and sprinkle pink flowers around the landscape. I have had my occasional triumphs,though. There was the year our son and I double dug a perennial flowerbed in front of my little office cottage, and planted it with zinnias, cleome, cosmos, sunflowers and pentas, which all flourished that one, amazing summer. And we’ve always had an arbor with pink New Dawn roses clambering over it. Even my father could have probably grown New Dawns, they’re that easy. I usually manage to keep the geraniums and fern baskets on our front porch alive for the duration of summer too.
Yesterday,I planted four dozen little peat-pots with four different varieties of sunflower seeds. I love the poetry and optimism in the variety of flower names: “Mammoth” “Ebony and Gold” “Skyscraper” and “Evening Sun.” In my mind’s eye, I see a row of tall blooms, their bright happy faces turned skyward. I see our little Molly, barefoot, in a hand-smocked white linen dress, toddling amongst the blooms, like one of those Anne Geddes greeting cards.
The reality, I know, is that even if I get some of those seedlings to grow and flower, they will probably be just as raggedy-ass and scraggly as my father’s lawn in St. Pete. Molly, it must be said, is not yet walking, let alone toddling. And even if she were toddling, would we let her do that barefoot, in a backyard that’s essentially a dog-run for our two English Setters? And then there’s the matter of that hand-smocked white linen dress. So far, I don’t know how to smock, and there is very little likelihood that I will learn that much-admired skill, what with trying to write a new book and grow those sunflowers. Still, I have my hopes. And isn’t that what gardening is ultimately all about?

I looked up and discovered that April had arrived–and along with it Easter. We spent the Easter weekend at Tybee, although not at the Breeze Inn, because by the time I realized Easter was coming up, our house was already rented! But the important thing was that we spent the weekend with our family, Katie, Mark and Molly, and Andy, otherwise known as Boomerang Boy. After a hard, cold winter on Tybee, we finally got a stretch of beautiful, sunny weather. The boys were able to get out on the boat and do a little fishing, and we all took long strolls and bike rides. Unfortunately, Molly, who is now 9 months old, was under the weather–cutting four teeth and with a nasty cold and cough that sounds like she’s been smoking Camels for years. So we didn’t get any beach time, because snot and drool really don’t mix well with sand. Today we had Easter lunch here at the cottage we were renting. Baked ham, Mr. Mary Kay’s fabulous lamb chops with cherry balsamic glaze, the Barefoot Contessa’s green, green spring vegetables, herbed new potatoes, and, of course, devilled eggs. Our friend Diane, of Mermaid Cottages, contributed not one, but two, desserts–apple cake with cream cheese frosting, and coconut cake. Our friends Ron and Leuveda joined us too, bringing a great goat cheese appetizer. And Jimmy and Susan took time off from running Seaside Sisters and Seaside Sweets, to stop by for lunch. The children left to drive back to Atlanta and Charlotte, and Mr. MK and I took a bike ride around the island. I even managed to sneak in a nap before heading over to the Kellehers for a second Easter meal. Yikes! Gotta take some brisk walks to work off some of these desserts. Hoping your Easter was as blessed with family, friends and food as ours was.
We had a brief, glorious hint of spring in Atlanta last weekend, sunny with temperatures inching close to 70. Naturally, I spent a good amount of time Friday afternoon trolling the AJC classifieds and Craigslist to put together my proposed line-up. On Saturday morning, when I was downstairs pouring my Diet Coke, Mr. Mary Kay looked astonished to see me up that early. Have I mentioned that I am NOT a morning person? “What are you doing?” he asked, as though I’d come downstairs in a skydiving or spelunking outfit. “It’s the home opener,” I replied.
“Huh?” And to that, I replied, “Junking season starts today!” Then I was out the door–driving his ginormous Yukon, because you can fit a buttload of junk in that puppy. My regular junk posse members were out of pocket or out of town Saturday, so Katie stepped in as a junior posse member. Katie is of that generation that thinks Pottery Barn and Restoration Hardware stuff is absolute nirvana, but these days she is suddenly hot to trot for junk, because she and her husband (and Molly) will be moving into their recently-purchased new home in May. And that Pottery Barn particle-board crap is NOT cheap. Have I mentioned that they (and by they, I mean Molly) will be living within walking distance in the ‘dale? We actually did a scouting trip on Friday afternoon, to a couple of sales in Midtown Atlanta. At the first sale, Katie stayed in the car with Molly, while I climbed the incredibly steep front steps to check out the action. Seeing a couple of things I thought might be workable, I signalled her to come up. But after hiking all those steps with 8-month-old Molly in her frontpack, Katie turned up her delicate nose at the porch offerings. In all honesty, I must say I wasn’t really sold on anything. There seemed to be a LOT of cat feeding dishes around. At one point, the woman running the sale mentioned to a ponytail-sporting man that she had, like six cats. So they started cat-talking, and he volunteered that he MAKES his own cat food. At which point, being decidely dog people, we fled the scene. We cruised past a porch sale that was to start Saturday morning, but Katie, who is very finicky about these things, opined that she didn’t like the look of the place. Have I mentioned that I somehow managed to raise a child who is NOT down with pawing through mildewy basments and roach-ridden attics in search of priceless antiques? Sigh. Where did I go wrong? Anyway, we hit seven or eight sales Saturday morning. And the only place I scored was at an estate sale I hit accidentally. I picked up a chenille bedspread, an old pickle jug with a wire bale and wooden handle, a repro Coke button sign (for The Breeze Inn) and some other goodies. At one point, Katie requested to be dropped off at home, so I struck out on my own. Back to the porch sale in Midtown, where I spotted four great Chinese Chippendale faux bamboo chairs. Wood, heavy as all get-out, and a matching octagonal table–complete with a leaf! The tabletop is some kind of wood-grained formica stuff, but the rest is very heavy wood, probably early 60s vintage, very DOMINO magazine-esque. Katie had been talking about wanting a real dining room set for her new house, so quick like a bunny I emailed her cellphone pix, and she called in her approval. I managed to talk the anemic-looking guy running the sale down to $125, and then I ran to the ATM for the required cash, and home to get the pick-up truck, along with Katie’s husband and father to help move the furniture. When we got back with the men and the truck, imagine my surprise when anemic guy suddenly peps up and volunteers to do the heavy lifting! Anyway, Katie and Mark love their new furniture, which was Katie’s early birthday present. Watch for pix as they move into their house and furnish it with all our junk finds. On Sunday, I got up and drove down to Tybee and The Breeze Inn, to try to get in some writing. The work was going well today, but after four or five hours, my shoulders and neck were so knotted up with tension, I could hardly move. I booked a massage appointment, and on the way home, I was cruising around the island, when I spotted an antique chest of drawers on the curb. Since tomorrow is trash pick-up day, I declared a junk emergency and called my friend Diane. “Are you up for a mission?” I asked. I told her what I’d spotted, and where it was. “Oh my gosh,” she exclaimed. “I bet that’s my dresser. I used to manage that house for my sister, and we sold it furnished.” Five minutes later, she pulled up to the house. Sure enough, the dresser was an antique solid pine piece Diane bought years ago at the old Lakewood Antique Market. The new owners of her sister’s former cottage apparently had no regard for good old stuff and put it out for the trash collectors. But now, the chest has been happily reunited with Diane. Junk karma for sure. And don’t you just love happy endings?
It’s springtime–or nearly so, and I’m feeling in the mood for a giveaway. So for my loyal blog readers I’m gifting two free copies of the audiobook version of my New York Times bestseller DEEP DISH. Like a $30 value! You’ll want to make sure to enter to win and add your name to my newsletter mailing list. That way you’ll receive my spring newsletter with all the details about my cool book club beach basket contest.
In the meantime, here’s the jacket copy description for DEEP DISH–Chef extraordinaire Gina Foxton doesn’t expect anything to be handed to her on a platter. After years of hard work, the former runner-up Miss Teen Vidalia Onion is now the host of her own local Georgia public television show called Fresh Start, and she’s dating the show’s producer. But when her show gets canceled—and she catches her boyfriend in flagrante delicto with the boss’s wife—Gina realizes that she’s meant for bigger and better things. Namely, a gig on national television.
The Cooking Channel is looking for its next big star, and Gina is certain that she fits the bill. Trouble is, the execs also have their eyes on Mr. “Kill It and Grill It” Tate Moody, the star of a hunting, fishing, and cooking show named Vittles. Tate is the ultimate man’s man, with a dog named Moonpie and a penchant for flannel shirts. He’s also a tasty side of beef with a swooning female fan base. All Gina has on her side are a free-spirited, college-dropout sister and a mother who calls every single day. Little does Gina know, though, that she and Tate are soon to embark on the cook-off of their lives, spiced up by a little ingredient called love.
You want a copy don’t you? So here’s what you do…Leave me a grovelling comment about how much you’d love to have a free audiobook of DEEP DISH. Then click the Newsletter tab at the top of the page to sign up for my email list before midnight, Friday, Mar. 19. And yes, joining my mailing list is essential in order to win the audiobook. I’ll announce winners next Monday, and my lovely assistant Grace will mail them out. Easy-peasy, right?

Whenever I’m in Savannah, I always stop in at E. Shaver Books. The “girls” at Shaver’s get me. They’ve hand-sold probably thousands of my books over the years–hey, I’ve written 17, ya know–, so whenever I stop in, they always have me autograph books. Then I wander around and see what’s what. That’s one of the joys of independent booksellers. They don’t just stock the New York Times bestsellers. They stock books they love, or think their customers will love. Indies know what their customers like to read. They know and support local writers. And they’re not afraid to champion a book they love. The Shaver’s girls always have the latest decorator porn books. They know and love cooking, so they are great at recommending cookbooks. They are the ones who put me onto THE GUERNSEY LITERARY AND POTATO PEEL PIE SOCIETY last year. And when I was there week before last, I asked about a book that’s receiving lots of buzz, THE POSTMISTRESS. Yes, they agreed, that was a good book. Big hit on the NYT list. But the book they insisted I buy was MAJOR PETTIGREW’S LAST STAND. Here’s what the Random House website says about it:
You are about to travel to Edgecombe St. Mary, a small village in the English countryside filled with rolling hills, thatched cottages, and a cast of characters both hilariously original and as familiar as the members of your own family. Among them is Major Ernest Pettigrew (retired), the unlikely hero of Helen Simonson’s wondrous debut. Wry, courtly, opinionated, and completely endearing, Major Pettigrew is one of the most indelible characters in contemporary fiction, and from the very first page of this remarkable novel he will steal your heart.
The Major leads a quiet life valuing the proper things that Englishmen have lived by for generations: honor, duty, decorum, and a properly brewed cup of tea. But then his brother’s death sparks an unexpected friendship with Mrs. Jasmina Ali, the Pakistani shopkeeper from the village. Drawn together by their shared love of literature and the loss of their respective spouses, the Major and Mrs. Ali soon find their friendship blossoming into something more. But village society insists on embracing him as the quintessential local and her as the permanent foreigner. Can their relationship survive the risks one takes when pursuing happiness in the face of culture and tradition?
I finished Major Pettigrew recently, and am completely in love with this quiet, charming book set in an English village, and so grateful to the girls at Shaver’s for turning me onto it. Last summer, while I was on tour for THE FIXER UPPER, another bookseller at an indie store, Browseabout Books in Rehoboth Beach, Delaware, hand-sold me another jewel of a book, called EAST OF THE SUN by Julia Gregson, which I never would have found without her recommendation. If you live in a community with an indie bookstore, you’re a lucky so-and-so. The big box stores have driven a lot of the wonderfullest indies out of business, and this tough economy has put them on the endangered species list. Some of my other favorite indies? Eagle Eye Books, right here in Decatur, just a couple miles from my house. FoxTale Books in Woodstock. GA. Scott’s in Newnan, Ga. Dog-Ear Books in Madison,GA. G.J. Ford on St. Simon’s Island,GA., Cyrano’s in Highlands, NC, Park Road Books in Charlotte, NC, Haslam’s, in my hometown of St. Petersburg, FL. Bay Street Trading Company in Beaufort, SC, Page and Palette in Fairhope, AL., Murder by the Book in Houston, Mystery Lover’s Books in Oakmont, PA., Quail Ridge Books in Raleigh, N.C.–if you’re ever in the triangle area, do yourself a favor and get over to Quail Ridge. While you’re there, it’s very likely you’ll run into a well-known author. This is partly because you can’t swing a cat in Raleigh without hitting a writer.I once burst into owner Nancy Olson’s office there while she was chatting with Charles Frazier, the author of COLD MOUNTAIN. There are many more wonderful independent bookstores than I can mention here. But the point is, the economy is tough. We’ve had a nasty winter, which means foot traffic is down at lots of these stores, who depend on foot traffic so they can hand-sell books. So do yourself a favor. Set aside an hour or so and wander over to your local indie and come away with a book you’ll love. And yeah, it’d be good if you bought a Mary Kay Andrews title. But if not, no worries. I’ll get ya next time.