The dolphin photo on our cover is the work of local nature photographer Eric Horan. Eric's last coffee table book is full of beautiful Lowcountry images like this one. Visit www.starbooks.biz
Shear Madness & Young Frankenstein
Theater/Dance
Southeastern Summer Theatre Institute (SSTI) is proud to present in its tenth season America's longest running play, Shear Madness, followed by the monster new musical comedyYoung Frankenstein.
Nicholas Di Mona creates unusual wood sculptures from dead and fallen trees. The beauty and elegance of the knots, inclusions, grain and natural imperfections make the final product a one-of-a-king piece of art. His unique work will be on display from August 7 - September 3 at the Society of Bluffton Artists (SoBA) gallery, located at 6 Church Street. Come meet the artist in person at the opening reception at 5 p.m. Friday, August 11 at the gallery.
Mark Powell may be southern literature's best kept secret - but not for long.
By Margaret Evans, Editor
Mark Powell is one of my favorite mysteries.
I discovered Mark through his novel The Sheltering, published by Pat Conroy's Story River Books in 2014. I was working as Pat's assistant at the time, and we both thought Mark's manuscript was nothing short of brilliant. Moody, complicated, and deeply disturbing, it rang with the dissonant harmonies of a profound new southern voice. Except it wasn't new. The Sheltering was Mark's fourth novel.
Ride Along on an Epic Quest in Teresa Bruce's Memoir The Drive
Interview by Mark Shaffer Photographs by Gary Geboy
"We will follow my father's route into the Peruvian highlands, through the looking glass of the girl I once was. I am ready. I have maps. I am prepared. But it will not matter. Whatever will happen next will do so without any regard for my plan or purpose." - Teresa Bruce, The Drive
Tragedy is a sneak thief in the night; an unannounced, unexpected intruder who takes the thing most precious to you without reason or explanation and vanishes amid the wailing. Or so it seems.
A Conversation with Bestselling Author Patti Callahan Henry
By Margaret Evans, Editor
Patti Callahan Henry is a New York Times bestselling author of twelve novels, including the The Bookshop at Water's End, which is dedicated to Pat Conroy and will be published in July. She's been a finalist in the Townsend Prize for Fiction, an Indie Next Pick, a Southern Independent Booksellers Alliance (SIBA) Okra pick (a booksellers' favorite), and a multiple nominee for the SIBA Novel of the Year. The mother of three children, Patti now lives in both Mountain Brook, Alabama, and Bluffton, South Carolina, with her husband. She will be the Pat Conroy Literary Center's Visiting Writers Series guest author on July 14, appearing in conversation with fellow novelist Ellen Malphrus. Patti recently joined me on the virtual porch of the Conroy Center to chat about her new novel and her writing life.