The book features three plays, primarily monologues, that present the lives of renowned women writers: Dorothy Parker, Zelda Fitzgerald, and Gertrude Stein. By allowing the characters to narrate their own stories, the author creates engaging biographical dramas. These works are particularly well-suited for regional and community theaters, making them an ideal choice for both actors and theater enthusiasts.
The poems and photographs in this book portray not only a state but a state of
mind. For several decades, the author traveled the backroads and crossroads of
South Carolina, observing and experiencing the thoughts and feelings of its
disparate people - at times gracious, sometimes troublesome, occasionally
alarming and regretful, always deeply engrained, and never negotiable. In
these pages, you will see how love and hate and ignorance and gentility do a
strange, awesome dance together, in a place where time and change must wait.
Like other states, South Carolina boasts its share of official totems: its
state song, state bird, nickname, beverage, fish, pet, and other fond
frivolities. But after reading this collection of thoughts and images from
times past and present, the reader will realize that every state, like this
one, must have clearly adopted schizophrenia as its official condition: a
breakdown in the relation between thought, emotion, and behavior, leading to
faulty perceptions and inappropriate actions and feelings. That's the kind of
condition that only a volume of poems and accompanying photographs can handle:
raw, in depth, stark, and cushioned with affection. This book takes the reader
on an intellectual journey of the state of things in years past, beginning in
the soft and insouciant foothills of the Upcountry to the preening, portentous
politicians, who populate the lake-laden Midlands, and finally to the languid
and languorous Lowcountry. If it's true, as they say, that life is mostly a
collection of memories, then this slim volume offers its readers a profundity
of historical insight, revelation, and--ultimately--truth.