Wednesday, December 31, 2008
Happy New Year's Eve everybody! The MKAs are staying in the 'hood tonight, partying with the posse. The hubbers are allegedly cooking dinner for the ladies. Mr. MKA, of course, is actually an excellent cook. At this moment he is finishing off his famous crab cake appetizers, which will be served with dollops of hot pepper jelly. He'll cook the standing rib roast at the P's house, while we watch the Peach (er, Chick-Fil-A) Bowl. In the meantime, here are the promised Tybee pix, both of the fabulous Dutton-Waller House, which I blogged about Monday, and the updated Breeze Inn. We finally seem to be moving right along with the beach house. The painters were almost finished with the inside when I left yesterday. The Moonlight White walls are going to be wonderful, giving this tired old house such a fresh, crisp look--like white sheets on the clothesline. PS--we actually have a clothesline in the backyard! The Morning Sky blue ceilings are sweet too, and the Shimmering Lime on the kitchen walls--well, it seems a little strong, but I think it's growing on me. The contractors have started framing up the exterior window trim, and there's some talk that we'll have paint on the outside some time next week. In other news, my never-ending sink search finally hit pay dirt. I found a great white porcelain vessel sink which will drop into my washstand for Boomerang Boy's bedroom. With it goes a cool faucet in french bronze finish. They were discontinued floor models from a plumbing place, so I got an amazing price on them. Still looking for that vintage laundry room sink. I hit two of our favorite building surplus places on Atlanta's westside today--Atlanta Building Surplus and Midtown Surplus, both in the Howell Mill Area. (Conveniently close to my other favorite haunts, Forsyth and Lewis & Shearin Fabrics and Ballard's Backroom) The surplus/salvage places have good stuff and great prices, but they didn't have the right size sink, or the louvered interior shutters I need for the master bedroom. Hope to check Pinch of the Past, the great archtictural salvage place in Savannah, to see if they have what I need. We managed to save all the old louvered interior shutters when we started the demo process at the Breeze, and with some retrofitting, and some primer and white paint, they'll work for the living room, saving me the killer cost of window treatments there. If all goes as promised, the plumber will start installing tubs, toilets, faucets and sinks on Monday, and the electrician will hang all our light fixtures, and then the floor guys, who live here in Atlanta, will head down to the beach Wednesday to do the final sand and finish. I'm keeping my fingers crossed!
Monday, December 29, 2008
Cottage Love
Living room, Dutton-Waller Cottage
Exterior, Dutton-Waller Cottage
I ran down to Tybee this evening to do a walk through of the beach house. Tonight I'm staying at a Mermaid Cottage called Dutton-Waller. Sigh. It's true love. Built in 1938 and added to the National Register of Historic Places in 2006, DW is a beach house with soul. It's the beach house The Breeze Inn wants to be when it grows up. This is yet another Jane Coslick/Diane Kaufman creation, and it was restored with so much love, so much thought, so much care, it makes my heart go pitter-patter. Tomorrow when it's daylight, and before I go over to the Breeze, I'll walk around and take some pics of all the glorious details to post. Until then, here's a little cottage porn for your perusal. Dutton-Waller says don't hate me 'cuz I'm beautiful.
Exterior, Dutton-Waller Cottage
I ran down to Tybee this evening to do a walk through of the beach house. Tonight I'm staying at a Mermaid Cottage called Dutton-Waller. Sigh. It's true love. Built in 1938 and added to the National Register of Historic Places in 2006, DW is a beach house with soul. It's the beach house The Breeze Inn wants to be when it grows up. This is yet another Jane Coslick/Diane Kaufman creation, and it was restored with so much love, so much thought, so much care, it makes my heart go pitter-patter. Tomorrow when it's daylight, and before I go over to the Breeze, I'll walk around and take some pics of all the glorious details to post. Until then, here's a little cottage porn for your perusal. Dutton-Waller says don't hate me 'cuz I'm beautiful.Friday, December 26, 2008
Boxing Day Greetings
The good china, silver and crystal are put away. The damask tablecloth and napkins are in a puddle on the floor, waiting to be dropped off at the cleaners. The fridge is full of left-overs. I'm sure I've gained ten pounds in December. The old mister is off golfing, which leaves me home alone to slog through 200 pages of copyedited manuscript--which have to be sent off to New York by this evening in order to make my deadline for THE FIXER UPPER. But it was a very, very wonderful Christmas. All my chicks were home to roost for Christmas, and they even went to the children's mass with us on Christmas Eve. It's always such a sweet service, with the little ones re-enacting the Christmas story. The whole family converged for Christmas dinner yesterday, and we gorged ourselves on standing rib roast, the old mister's famous Christmas ducks, and all the trimmings. Afterwards, the younger set had a blast playing with my son-in-law's new Wii Rockband game, and we nearly laughed ourselves sick watching them. So, back to work for me this morning, but first I thought I'd share some pix of our holiday decorating. After nearly killing myself decorating for our neighborhood tour of homes last year, I didn't even put out half of my vintage Christmas collectibles this year, although it still looks like a lot. Old bottlebrush trees mixed in with my blue and white transferware on the Welsh cupboard in the dining room, gold and silver glass grape clusters mixed in with the mantel greenery, my goofy snowmen gathered in the antique secretary, and the old dime-store Christmas boxes on the sunroom table were among the collections that did get put out this year. I hope your holiday was just as blessed and filled with family, friends, love and laughter!
Tuesday, December 23, 2008
Darlene Love on Letterman 2-Nite: Must See TV!
Yessss! The night I wait for every Christmas season. Darlene Love singing the song she owns. CHRISTMAS: BABY PLEASE COME HOME. With the exception of last year, when the writer's strike was going on, Darlene has appeared on Letterman's Christmas show every year since 1986 to perform her masterpiece. Last year, thankfully, CBS showed a re-run of her 2006 performance. Folks, it don't get no better than this. Just in case you are a pathetic little girly-man who has to turn in early this time of year, as a public service, here's a link to Darlene rockin' it in 2004. Fix yourself an adult beverage, kick back and relax. No, really. You're welcome. It's nothing at all. Merry Christmas!Monday, December 22, 2008
The Breeze Inn Update
Jane Coslick's Luscious Little Cottage, as seen in Jan. COASTAL LIVINGThe old mister, his brother Bob and I drove down to Tybee early Friday to do a walk-through of the house. We thought the carpentry inside would be completed, and that our painters could get started. But we were mistaken. No single room in the house was complete, which was a disappointment. Still, there was big progress. The kitchen sink is in! The old mister gave me such grief over that old sink. It won't fit. It's too big. It'll never work. Blahblahblah. He was sooooo wrong. The sink looks fabu, as you can plainly see. Can't wait for the plumber to install the cool retro chrome faucet I picked out. In other news, the painters actually had started work. They'd patched all the bazillion nail holes in the 1x6 plank walls, primed the dark wood ceilings and even painted the ceilings in the two back bedrooms. Love, love love the ceiling color. It's a Benjamin Moore shade called Morning Sky Blue, and we have used it in our Atlanta house. It makes ceilings look high and cool, like, well, a morning sky. And in such a small house--the Breeze is only 1,750 square feet, we wanted to maximize ceiling height. I finally found a wall color. Jane Coslick, who is the design whiz behind the most wonderful cottage restorations on Tybee, (and many of the Mermaid Cottage rentals) and who has been consulting on the Breeze, insisted the only suitable white was a shade called Glass of Milk. One problem---it's a Martha Stewart for Sherwin-Williams color, and it's out of production. Martha has changed paint houses twice since SW, and I couldn't find anybody who'd share the formula. Luckily, the folks at the Benjamin Moore dealership in Savannah, on Waters Avenue, said they had an equivalent--called Moonlight White. How poetic does this sound? Moonlight White walls and Morning Sky Blue walls. With a dash of Shimmering Lime on the kitchen walls. I'd planned for all the other rooms to be Moonlight, but when I saw how pretty the Morning Sky Blue ceilings were, I changed my mind--and now our master bath walls will be that pretty blue. I love the idea of lolling back in my old clawfoot tub, looking at Morning Sky. The outside of the house, currently painted in a hideous combination I call Safety Yellow with Smurf Blue trim, is going to be painted a soft blue-green called Aquatint, with white trim. At Jane's suggestion, all the exterior doors will be painted a hibiscus pink color called Blossom. On Saturday, the weather was unbelievably beautiful--74 and sunny. The guys went out fishing and I went hunting. For sinks. Yes. Again with the sinks. I bought an old metal washstand at an estate sale months ago, with the idea of installing it with a sink in Boomerang Boy's bedroom. It's an old Tybee beach house tradition to have sinks in bedrooms. My friends Ron and Leuveda have such an adorable sink in their Garner Cottage guest house, and I decided to copy it. But my washstand has two problems. It's short. Boomerang Boy would have to get on his knees to brush his teeth in it. It needs to have five more inches added on. No problem-o. I found a welder who said he could easily do the job. Problem 2. The opening for the sink is only 14-3/4 inches. The smallest sink I could find anywhere in Savannah is 17 inches. So now I will have to turn to my friends at Sandpiper Plumbing Supply to see if they can hunt me up a weensy little sink.
My other sink search involves the ideal sink for the laundry room. Of course I want an old sink, the kind with the porcelain over cast iron finish, preferably with a drainboard, so that Mr. Mary Kay can clean fish in the laundry room, instead of splattering fishguts all over my pretty shimmering lime kitchen. But the sink cabinet is 36 inches. Closest vintage sink I've found so far is 42 inches. Ah well, the hunt will continue. In January, I'll hit Scott's Antique Market and look up the guys who sold me my other sink and clawfoot tub. Speaking of Scott's, did I mention that Katie and I are going flea marketing there with mon amour Eddie Ross in January? Eat your hearts out, fellow junkers. But in the meantime, when we pulled up to the house Friday, I discovered that we have a rosebush in the front yard. I guess I overlooked the puny little stick last time I was there. But this time? Our rose--creamy yellow with peachy pink centers, was in full bloom. Five days before Christmas. I call it an omen of good things to come. P.S. To take a gander at one of Jane Coslick's genius cottage restorations, check the Jan.Feb. issue of Coastal Living for their piece on Luscious Little Cottage.
My other sink search involves the ideal sink for the laundry room. Of course I want an old sink, the kind with the porcelain over cast iron finish, preferably with a drainboard, so that Mr. Mary Kay can clean fish in the laundry room, instead of splattering fishguts all over my pretty shimmering lime kitchen. But the sink cabinet is 36 inches. Closest vintage sink I've found so far is 42 inches. Ah well, the hunt will continue. In January, I'll hit Scott's Antique Market and look up the guys who sold me my other sink and clawfoot tub. Speaking of Scott's, did I mention that Katie and I are going flea marketing there with mon amour Eddie Ross in January? Eat your hearts out, fellow junkers. But in the meantime, when we pulled up to the house Friday, I discovered that we have a rosebush in the front yard. I guess I overlooked the puny little stick last time I was there. But this time? Our rose--creamy yellow with peachy pink centers, was in full bloom. Five days before Christmas. I call it an omen of good things to come. P.S. To take a gander at one of Jane Coslick's genius cottage restorations, check the Jan.Feb. issue of Coastal Living for their piece on Luscious Little Cottage.
Santa Claus sez: it's Jeanie!

The crackerjack staff here at Mary Kay Andrews Global Industries employed a random number generator to pick the winner of my holiday book giveaway. Survey sez: It's Jeanie--who was in the hospital without wi-fi for six days. Now that's misery. Jeanie, hurry up and email marykayandrews@aol your snailmail addy so Grace can ship off your autographed copies of SAVANNAH BLUES, SAVANNAH BREEZE and BLUE CHRISTMAS. You can also hop over to Vintage Rescue Squad to see who won Vintage Sue's giveaway of my books. PS, Jeanie, let me know how you want your books signed. Happy Holidays! Keep watching this space. Hope to give an update on the Tybee house later today, after I finish some last minute Christmas shopping.
Friday, December 19, 2008
Don't forget the Holiday Giveaway!
Cmon, you guys! Leave a comment, and take a chance at winning autographed copies of my SAVANNAH trilogy: SAVANNAH BLUES, SAVANNAH BREEZE and BLUE CHRISTMAS. Contest ends tonight at midnight. In the meantime, we're actually down at Tybee Island right now, to do a walk-through on The Breeze Inn. The bathrooms are tiled, painting has started...so close, and yet so far. Hope to post updated pix this weekend. In the meantime, Don't forget to go over to Vintage Rescue Squad for a second chance to win. My blog-buddy Vintage Sue is a retro-riffic queen!
Holiday Skullduggery
Posse member Susie's daughter Maggy was coming home from a semester abroad in Italy last night. It was a special occasion that called for a black bag job. We began reconnaissance of the 'hood yesterday morning. Jinxie's assignment was to find a discarded toilet. For years now, when any member of the posse has had an elegant party or event, posse members (and their husbands) have contributed a discarded commode to the outdoor decor. Jinxie radioed in at 1100 hours yesterday. Toilet in the dumpster on Stratford. Roger that. Jinx also requisitioned some large empty wine bottles from the recycling bin at the Farmer's Market, along with some tasteful plastic poinsettias from the Dollar Store. She also created a rockin' Welcome Home sign. (Jinx is a retired school teacher with many empty hours to fill.) When I got home from another mission last night (gift wrapping party at Katie's house), the troops began to assemble. Mr. Mary Kay had liberated said commode from said dumpster. Jinx had the sign and the plastic posies. I contributed a fake white tree left over from last year's Christmas tour, and the all-important cardboard Elvis. (Doesn't everybody have a six-foot-tall cardboard Elvis in their basement?) We sent a scouting party over to Susie's house to see if the target had vacated the premises for the airport. Three operatives; myself, Jinx and Shay, skulked around in the D's backyard, checking for signs of occupancy. Curses! Maggy's flight was delayed. Repeatedly. To be continued.
Wednesday, December 17, 2008
Call me Crazy--Another Holiday Giveaway
I met my new Washington DC-based friend Sue, of Vintage Rescue Squad through the blogosphere. She's a fellow junker, with a kinky sense of humor much like my own. We had a fun phone discussion about junk n' stuff recently, and afterwards, put our heads together to come up with another fun giveaway on both our blogs. So here's the deal. You can read one of Sue's recent posts here, then click over there to read her take on our conversation. She'll send her blog buddies over here, and eventually, we'll take over the entire blogversity. Ours will be a benevolent dictatorsip, with mandatory daily chocolate intake, twice-weekly junk breaks, and hot and cold running Diet Coke. Did I mention that ours will be a world free of pantyhose, meanies and frozen fishsticks? http://vintagerescue.typepad.com/vintage_rescue_squad/2008/12/nothing-but-smalls.htmlDon't forget to come back over here and leave a comment in order to be eligible for the giveaway: Autographed copies of my Savannah trilogy: SAVANNAH BLUES, SAVANNAH BREEZE and BLUE CHRISTMAS. Contest ends midnight, Sat. Dec. 20.
Tuesday, December 16, 2008
Christmas Junking
Last week, just as Katie and I were about to leave for an estate sale, Boomerang Boy sauntered in with a request. "I need a jackass Christmas sweater for the P's party," he announced. "Something tacky." Katie and I exchanged a knowing nod. "We're on it," Katie assured him. Thirty minutes later, we were at the sale. The late home-owner had been in her house for over sixty years. From the amount of mildew, dust and debris, we estimated it had last been cleaned sometime in the Nixon administration. Katie was appalled. My daughter is neat, orderly, organized. We fear it's some sort of sleeper gene. I was thrilled. For you see, vintage treasure-seekers, mildew, dust and debris are the sure signs of a packrat. What you want to see at a good estate sale is a pile of old boxes and rotted army foot-lockers and broken furniture at the curb. What you do not want to see is a newly-mopped floor and a plastic bin full of eight-track tapes. Or a family member with a clipboard and a list of prices. Or, Gawd forbid, the latest Kovel's price-guide in hand. When you approach an estate sale house, it's always good to see more piles--maybe some rusty lawn furniture or crusty concrete planters or garden urns. We saw these things and more at last week's sale. The house was a festival of what-nots, geegaws, whimdoodles, tchtoskes, flotsam and jetsam. Katie's upper-lip curled. Her nostrils flared at the merest hint of mold. I, on the other hand, nearly leapt for joy, despite the cold I'd picked up in New York. We made our way upstairs. And sure enough, heaped on a bed amidst a mountain of clothing and household linens, we found the perfect vintage Christmas sweater. Three perfect sweaters, to be exact. Two of them were identical, intricate patterns of downhill skiiers, expertly executed, but in an unfortunate cheesey synthetic yarn. The third, green sweater, was really lovely, in a good quality yarn. All for the bargain price of five bucks. Downstairs, as we were paying for your goodies, the deceased's son nodded approvingly. "My mom knit those sweaters for me," he told us. "She loved to knit." He, apparently, did not love her enough to keep the fruits of all those labors, but never mind. To the victors go the spoils. Afterwards, Katie took her outraged sensibilities and inflamed sinuses to bed. And Andy and his best buddies Andrew, Kevin and Michael all wore their "jackass" Christmas togs to the P's party. Unfortunately, only Andy and Andrew were svelte enough to fit into the vintage sweaters. In fact, if you look closely, you'll see that Andrew is wearing his red sweater under the green one. Michael did fit into a "jackass" plaid sportcoat his mom and I picked up for him at an earlier estate sale, and Kevin wore his own sweater. Pictured above are the four amigos, all friends since diaper days, enjoying some Christmas libations.
Sunday, December 14, 2008
Holiday giveaway winner
Becky 0525--come on down! You're the big winner of the holiday giveaway. The crackerjack MaryKayAndrews Global Industries Staff conducted a scientific computerized random drawing to determine the numerical superiority of your entry. (Ok, actually my son-in-law picked your number, while watching football yesterday,) Anyhow, the staff will mail off your book as soon as you email me your snailmail address at marykayandrews@aol.com . Today would be good, because the staff, namely Grace, only works for me on Mondays. In the meantime, keep watching this space for another cool holiday giveaway. Also, for some cool random holiday pix.
Friday, December 12, 2008
Christmas Movies: Home Alone vs. White Christmas

Katie and I were talking about our favorite Christmas movies during a shopping jaunt yesterday. Everybody knows WHITE CHRISTMAS is my favorite. I've got my very own DVD of it, and every year, I sit in bed, propped up on pillows and watch it. Sometimes Katie will relent and watch it with me. I love the vintage costumes--Vera Ellen's wasp waist--she reminds me of one of those tiny dancers on top of a music box. Rosemary Clooney in that dramatic black velvet gown in the "Love, You Didn't Do Right By Me" number. Love it all. Perhaps my love for it comes from the fact that I grew up in St. Petersburg, FL and never saw real snow until I was 14 or 15, or perhaps because the movie was released the year I was born, 1954. I love that movie so much, when I wrote MIDNIGHT CLEAR, a Christmas mystery under my real name, Kathy Hogan Trocheck, I had a costumer friend make me a copy of the red satin Mrs. Santa outfit Rosemary wears in the movie finale. Katie, on the other hand, is a stalwart HOME ALONE(1990) fan. I was telling her about how I watched it Thanksgiving night, while Mr.Mary Kay dozed on the sofa, and how I was laughing out loud when Kevin clonks old Harry and Marv with everything from paint buckets to a steam iron. (Speaking of the old Mister, he has his own touching holiday ritual--watching DIE HARD and sipping bourbon on the sofa Christmas Eve, while I frantically race around trying to remember where the hell I hid all the stocking presents) Katie and I agreed that we loved the Home Alone house as much as the movie. And reminded each other that we'd actually seen the real house years ago, when the kids were little, on a trip to visit family in Chicago. I was doing a book signing at a store in Winnetka, and the store owner told me where the actual house was. We drove over, and the kids oohed and ahhed at the sight of so much magical mayhem. Katie hedged her bets by saying she also loves LOVE ACTUALLY, and can never get enough of watching THE REF. The Ref is a little too dark and cynical for a cornball like me. I'm still kickin' it old school. I like to reach waaaay back in the movie vault for goodies like THE BISHOPS WIFE (1943) with the gorgeous Loretta Young, David Niven and Cary Grant, or the original movie that provided the spin-off for White Christmas, 1942s' HOLIDAY INN. I also adore the vintage screwball antics in CHRISTMAS IN CONNECTICUT (1942) with Barbara Stanwyk as a magazine writer posing as an expert homemaker. Another Christmas movie I love is DESK SET (1957) with Katharine Hepburn and Spencer Tracy--and the always reliable Gig Young and Joan Blondell. In the movie, Katharine is the head of a network research department, and Tracy is the computer whiz threatening to make her department obsolete with the introduction of a room-size computer called "Enerac".
And the movie my kids agree we all love is CHRISTMAS STORY, released in 1983. Roaming around the internet, I found Moviefone's list of 25 top Christmas movies of all time. I don't know that I agree with their choices, but maybe you'll find some you'd forgotten about. Or maybe you'll share some of your favorites.
Thursday, December 11, 2008
Holiday Giveaway!
I should have written a celebratory post about my 100th blog post. Or my 150th. But stuff happens. Life gets away from you like that, especially this time of year. But to make it up to my readers, I've got a giveaway now to celebrate my 156th post. Yay me. I've really come to love blogging over the past 18 months or so. Maybe it's the recovering journalist in me, or maybe it's my pathetic need for instant gratification. You may not know this, but when I finish a book it's at least nine months before it comes out. Nine months without knowing how I'm doing. But with the blog, I know immediately how I'm doing. Or not. Sometimes I wonder if there's anybody out there reading this stuff that comes streaming out of my fingertips. So here's the thing. If you're a reader, let me know. Leave me a comment. The crackerjack staff here at MaryKayAndrews Global Industries will assign everybody a number, and we'll pick from the hat. Offer ends Sunday Dec. 14.The winner will get this swell book, GRACIOUS TABLES by Phyllis Hoffman, graciously donated by my gracious publisher HarperCollins. Here's how Publisher's Weekly described the book:
Entertaining doyenne Phyllis Hoffman shows how to prepare a stunning table for any occasion.
So many of the events of our lives, from the formal to the informal, are celebrated by gathering around a table. Whatever the occasion—whether it's a holiday dinner, Sunday brunch, or a casual lunch with friends—the table is the place where we relax and enjoy each other's company while savoring a great meal.
No one knows how to dress a table with elegance and flair better than Phyllis Hoffman, publisher of Southern Lady magazine, the quintessential resource for entertaining the gracious Southern way. Now, Hoffman draws upon her years of expertise to create Southern Lady Gracious Tables, the definitive guide to creating gorgeous "tablescapes" for every occasion.
Starting with the basics, Hoffman presents a series of breathtaking spreads for a whole range of occasions, from formal settings to casual get-togethers, and describes how to achieve each look, right down to the recipes—55 in total—for her mouthwatering specialties. Enjoy a lovely outdoor lunch of tasty Fried Green Tomatoes with Crab and Green Chile Cream Sauce, or finish off a dinner party with delectable Praline Bread Pudding with Bourbon Sauce.
Hoffman then builds a "wardrobe for the table," navigating through the complex world of dinnerware, fine linens, and serving pieces. Each and every element of the table—from fruit saucer to lemon fork to water goblet—is covered in a friendly, helpful way.
Finally, there's advice on adding that all-important personal touch, with instructions on how to craft flowers, family heirlooms, collectibles, and other unexpected treasures into the perfect centerpiece, place marker, or accent. All along, her advice includes refreshingly simple techniques for presentation and encourages the reader's own creativity in playing with colors, patterns, and styles.
Complemented by lush photography and told in Hoffman's accessible, encouraging, and deliciously Southern voice, Southern Lady Gracious Tables is a must-have for every aspiring hostess, south or north of the Mason Dixon. The perfect gift for any woman who loves to entertain, it has all the tools, tips, and inspiration you need to elevate the ordinary to the unforgettable.
Entertaining doyenne Phyllis Hoffman shows how to prepare a stunning table for any occasion.
So many of the events of our lives, from the formal to the informal, are celebrated by gathering around a table. Whatever the occasion—whether it's a holiday dinner, Sunday brunch, or a casual lunch with friends—the table is the place where we relax and enjoy each other's company while savoring a great meal.
No one knows how to dress a table with elegance and flair better than Phyllis Hoffman, publisher of Southern Lady magazine, the quintessential resource for entertaining the gracious Southern way. Now, Hoffman draws upon her years of expertise to create Southern Lady Gracious Tables, the definitive guide to creating gorgeous "tablescapes" for every occasion.
Starting with the basics, Hoffman presents a series of breathtaking spreads for a whole range of occasions, from formal settings to casual get-togethers, and describes how to achieve each look, right down to the recipes—55 in total—for her mouthwatering specialties. Enjoy a lovely outdoor lunch of tasty Fried Green Tomatoes with Crab and Green Chile Cream Sauce, or finish off a dinner party with delectable Praline Bread Pudding with Bourbon Sauce.
Hoffman then builds a "wardrobe for the table," navigating through the complex world of dinnerware, fine linens, and serving pieces. Each and every element of the table—from fruit saucer to lemon fork to water goblet—is covered in a friendly, helpful way.
Finally, there's advice on adding that all-important personal touch, with instructions on how to craft flowers, family heirlooms, collectibles, and other unexpected treasures into the perfect centerpiece, place marker, or accent. All along, her advice includes refreshingly simple techniques for presentation and encourages the reader's own creativity in playing with colors, patterns, and styles.
Complemented by lush photography and told in Hoffman's accessible, encouraging, and deliciously Southern voice, Southern Lady Gracious Tables is a must-have for every aspiring hostess, south or north of the Mason Dixon. The perfect gift for any woman who loves to entertain, it has all the tools, tips, and inspiration you need to elevate the ordinary to the unforgettable.
Ya'll come play, okay? Contest ends midnight, Sun. Dec. 14
Tuesday, December 9, 2008
Some Enchanted Evening
South Pacific was....magical. My plane landed at LaGuardia at 11 a.m. Sunday. I cabbed over to the Omni Berkshire, dropped my bags, and trotted over to Lincoln Center (ok, actually, I cabbed there too. It was frickin' cold!) I managed to buy one of the last tickets available for the 3p.m. matinee, nearly choking at the price. But this was, as my friend Beth would say, a from-me-to-me early Christmas gift. Like Nellie Forbush, I'm as corny as Kansas in August, and I just adore musicals. My mother loved musicals too, and always took us to see movie musicals like Gypsy, Sound of Music and The Music Man. I think the first song lyrics I can remember came from the cast album of My Fair Lady. But Mom had never been to New York, or seen a show on Broadway, until four or five years ago, when my older sister Susie and I, and Katie, took her to New York as a Mother's Day gift. We had tickets to see Gypsy with Bernadette Peters, and we went to see a cabaret act at The Algonquin, lunch at Tavern on the Green, and dinner at Sardis--all the things she'd always dreamed of doing in New York. She had emphysema by then, and couldn't walk much, so we even hired a car to pick us up and take us to and from the theatre. The weather that weekend was sunny, but a little cool, and Mom was so excited to be in New York, we even got her to walk down Fifth Avenue and window shop at Tiffany's and Bloomingdales. She dined out on stories of that trip for months afterward, and when she died a little over a year later, we were so glad she'd finally gotten to see New York. For this trip, I decided if I could only see one Broadway show, South Pacific, in its first revival since the original Broadway run ended in 1954 (the year I was born) would be the one. After I bought my tickets, I still had a couple hours to kill, so I took myself over to P.J. Clarke's across the street, for a leisurely lunch. It was so much fun watching the holiday crowds at the theatre. Ladies wrapped in mink, shod in Prada, ginormous Louis Vuitton bags casually slung over their shoulders, important big girl jewelry twinkling in the lobby lights. I knew I'd bought an expensive ticket, but it wasn't until the usher showed me to my seat that I realized I was in the fourth row center, orchestra! When the house lights dimmed and the overture began, I got a huge lump in my throat, thinking about how much Mom would have loved being there. And when David Pittinger, the actor playing Emil de Becque launched into Some Enchanted Evening, with that gorgeous baritone voice of his, I found myself fighting back tears. Sure, the song was unbelieveably romantic, but I was thinking of my dad, and his favorite knock-knock joke, which went like this: "knock-knock." Who's there? "Sam and Janet." Sam and Janet who? "Sam and Janet Evening..." Daddy was the king of corn. So I shed another silly little tear, then I sat back, and let the music and the acting sweep me away to that far away south sea island.
It was dark and cold outside when the show ended, but I decided to walk the twenty blocks over to Times Square to try to buy tickets to another show. Alas, White Christmas was completely sold out. So I walked over to a lovely Italian restaraunt near my hotel, Il Corso, and I toasted the evening, and memories silly and sad, with a couple of glasses of prosecco and some pasta. And it truly was an enchanted evening.
Friday, December 5, 2008
Castaway, and loving it

On Wednesday, I made a quick run down to Tybee to check on progress on my own personal fixer-upper, The Breeze Inn. While there I stayed in yet another luscious Mermaid Cottage. This one is called The Castaway, and it's a Jane Coslick original. I felt as though I were living in a Key West fruit cocktail, with all those limes, turquoises and coral colors. Quite a treat when everything at home in Atlanta is cold and gray and chilly. The weather was warm enough to leave my coat in the car. But then it was right back to Atlanta to get ready for a business trip to New York. I'm flying up Sunday and if I can swing it, hope to get to a couple of Broadway plays before meeting with my editor and the marketing folks at HarperCollins. I'm a sap for musicals, so I'm hoping to catch a matinee and evening performance--would love to see WHITE CHRISTMAS and SOUTH PACIFIC. Don't forget to stay tuned for next week's giveaway details.Thursday, December 4, 2008
We have a winner....

Actually, THREE winners. Just to ensure impartiality (and get myself off the hook) I asked Kevin Callahan, HarperCollins guru for all things online, to judge the contest. Kevin and I agreed that all of you were outstanding, however, we only have three extra ARCs, so here are the winners. Drum Roll, please:
Amy from Montgomery, AL
Suzy from Hampton, VA
Anita from Iowa.
You guys rock! If you'll email me your snailmail addresses at MaryKayAndrews@aol.com
I'll forward those to Kevin and he'll send your prizes--as soon as they're printed, which will probably be after Christmas. In the meantime, through the generosity of Kevin and HarperCollins, everybody who left a comment--all 14 of you, will receive a copy of BLUE CHRISTMAS in time for holiday reading or giving. So if you left a comment, email me your snailmail at above address and we'll get your prezzie on its way.
Come back tomorrow to see pix of the adorable house I stayed at on Tybee this week, and to find out about next week's fab giveaway!
Tuesday, December 2, 2008
Don't Forget Your Fixer-Upper Catastrophes
Wow--I thought I had some horror stories! Dead dogs, cat piss, falling naked into the garage--now that's what I call some drama. Entries for the best/worst Fixer-Upper comments close at midnight tonight. Three winners will receive Advance Readers Copies of my next novel, THE FIXER-UPPER. Book publishes in June, but you'll have your own advance copy months earlier!
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