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SIBA Okra Pick Nationally syndicated columnist Rheta Grimsley
Johnson, winner of the Ernie Pyle Award for human interest
reporting, turns her sharp eye on herself in this frank,
exhilarating, wise, poignant, and brave memoir. Her territory
ranges from childhood memories of ritual pre-interstate trips in
the family station wagon to visit foot-washing Baptist relatives to
young-girl fixations on the Barbie dolls of the title, from the
simultaneous exuberance and proto-feminist doubts of young marriage
to the aches of loves lost through divorce and death. Her memorable
journalism career, which began on her college newspaper and rural
weeklies and moved on to prestigious big-city dailies, was
punctuated by her distinctive writing voice and an unerring knack
for revealing her much-loved South through uncommon stories about
its common people. This is a big-hearted book that will leave no
reader unaffected.
For over a decade, syndicated columnist Rheta Grimsley Johnson has
been spending several months a year in Southwest Louisiana, deep in
the heart of Cajun Country. Unlike many other writers who have
parachuted into the swampy paradise for a few days or weeks, Rheta
fell in love with the place, bought a second home and set in
planting doomed azaleas and deep roots. She has found an assortment
of beautiful people in a homely little town called Henderson, right
on the edge of the Atchafalaya Swamp. These days, much is labeled
Cajun that is not, and the popularity of the unique culture’s
food, songs and dance has been a mixed blessing. The revival of
French Louisiana’s traditional music and cuisine often has been
cheapened by counterfeits. Confused pilgrims sometimes look to New
Orleans for a sampler platter of all things Cajun. Close, but no
cigar. Poor Man’s Provence helps define what’s what through
lively characters and stories. The book is both personal odyssey
and good reporting, travelogue and memoir, funny and frank. This
beguiling place is as exotic as it gets without a passport. The
author shares what keeps her coming home to French Louisiana. And
as NPR commentator Bailey White observes in her foreword, "Both
Rheta's readers and the people she writes about will be
comfortable, well fed, highly entertained, and happy they came to
Poor Man's Provence."
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