Susan M. Boyer

USA TODAY Bestselling Author
Agatha Award Winner

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Susan M. Boyer

USA TODAY Bestselling Author
Agatha Award Winner

  • Home
  • About
    • Bio
    • Media Kit
    • Photo Galleries
    • Privacy Policy
  • Books
  • News
  • Events
  • Stella Maris
    • Stella Maris Map
    • Who’s Who in Stella Maris
  • Blog
  • The Back Porch
  • Contact

Media Kit

June 12, 2012 in about, Uncategorized

Short Biography

Susan M. Boyer is the author of the USA TODAY bestselling Liz Talbot mystery series. Her debut novel, Lowcountry Boil, won the 2012 Agatha Award for Best First Novel, the Daphne du Maurier Award for Excellence in Mystery/Suspense, and garnered several other award nominations, including the Macavity. The third book in the series, Lowcountry Boneyard, was a Spring 2015 Southern Independent Booksellers Alliance Okra Pick, and has been short-listed for the 2016 Pat Conroy Beach Music Mystery Prize. It is also a 2016 Daphne du Maurier finalist for the Mainstream Mystery/Suspense award.

Lowcountry Bordello, the fourth Liz Talbot mystery, was released November 3, 2015. LOWCOUNTRY BOOK CLUB released July 5th, 2016 and was a Summer 2016 SIBA Okra Pick.

Susan loves beaches, Southern food, and small towns where everyone knows everyone, and everyone has crazy relatives. You’ll find all of the above in her novels. She lives in Greenville, SC, with her husband and an inordinate number of houseplants.

susanmboyerbooks.com

Long Biography

Born and raised in Faith, North Carolina, Susan M. Boyer was blessed with a quintessential small-town childhood. She’s had a life-long love affair with books, and is grateful to have been gifted with an over-active imagination. Susan was one of those children whose teachers were always telling her mamma that her talents needed to be “channeled.” She’s been making things up and writing them down her whole life.

Susan took a sampler’s approach to education. She attended N.C. State University, Catawba College, and College of Charleston. She has a long list of majors, one of which was English. Unfortunately, none of the above institutions could be convinced that her hodgepodge of credits–though impressive in number–merited awarding Susan a degree.

Because computer programming offered a steady paycheck, Susan practiced that art for a while, then segued into systems analysis, and later project management.

But her day job interfered with her writing habit, so in 2004, Susan had to give up rush hour, project plans, and staff meetings. She declared herself unemployable by any other means and has spent her days writing and daydreaming too much in her pajamas ever since.

Susan’s debut novel, LOWCOUNTRY BOIL is a USA Today Bestseller, an Agatha Award winner for Best First Novel, a Macavity nominee for Best First Novel, a 2012 Daphne du Maurier Award for Excellence in Mystery/Suspense recipient, and a 2012 RWA Golden Heart® finalist. LOWCOUNTRY BOMBSHELL, the second Liz Talbot Mystery, was released September 3, 2013 and is also a USA Today Bestseller.  LOWCOUNTRY BONEYARD came out April 21, 2015, and was a USA Today Bestseller, Spring 2015 Southern Independent Booksellers Alliance Okra Pick, was short-listed for the 2016 Pat Conroy Beach Music Mystery Prize, and is a 2016 Daphne du Maurier finalist for the Mainstream Mystery/Suspense award. LOWCOUNTRY BORDELLO followed November 3, 2015. LOWCOUNTRY BOOK CLUB released July 5th, 2016 and was a Summer 2016 SIBA Okra Pick. Susan plans for Liz Talbot to have many more cases to solve.

Susan’s short fiction has appeared in moonShine Review, Spinetingler Magazine, and Relief Journal, among others. She is the recipient of Relief Journal’s editor’s choice award in fiction and has been recognized by the Carrie McCrary Memorial Literary Awards program.

She served on the board of directors for South Carolina Writers’ Workshop 2006 – 2009, and was chairperson for the organization’s annual conference 2007 – 2008.

Visit Susan on the web at susanmboyerbooks.com.

Photos of Susan

Boyer-1773

Book Cover Images

LowcountryBordello FRONT

 

Lowcountry Book Club FINAL

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Points of Contact

Press Releases

Publicist

Magic Time Literary Agency (Speaking Engagements & Special Events)
Kathie Bennett
(864) 706 – 1484
kathie@magictimeliterary.com
 
Claire McKinney PR LLC
(Media, In-Store Signings, All Other Inquiries)
41 Main Street
Chester, NJ 07930
 
Claire McKinney
claire@clairemckinneyPR.com
Phone: (908) 955-7563
 
Larissa Ackerman
larissa@clairemckinneypr.com
Phone: (908) 955-7580

 

 

  • Lowcountry Book Club Press Release
  • Agatha Award Press Release
  • Official Press Release
  • Book Launch Party at Fiction Addiction Press Release

Professional Affiliations

  • Romance Writers of America®
  • The Firebirds (2012 Golden Heart® Finalists)
  • The Golden Network (Chapter of RWA®)
  • Kiss of Death (Chapter of RWA®)
  • Sisters in Crime
  • Mystery Writers of America
  • The Private Eye Writers of America
  • South Carolina Writers’ Workshop

 

Filed Under: about, Uncategorized

About Susan

June 12, 2012 in about, Uncategorized

Susan M. Boyer is the author of the USA TODAY bestselling Liz Talbot mystery series. Her debut novel, Lowcountry Boil, won the 2012 Agatha Award for Best First Novel, the Daphne du Maurier Award for Excellence in Mystery/Suspense, and garnered several other award nominations, including the Macavity.

Lowcountry Boneyard, the third Liz Talbot mystery, was a Spring 2015 Southern Independent Booksellers Alliance Okra Pick and a USA Today Bestseller. It was also a finalist for The 2016 Pat Conroy Southern Book Prize Award in the Beach Music Mystery category, and is a finalist for the 2016 Daphne du Maurier Award in the Mainstream Mystery/Suspense category.

LOWCOUNTRY BOOK CLUB released July 5th, 2016 and was a Summer 2016 SIBA Okra Pick. Susan loves beaches, Southern food, and small towns where everyone knows everyone, and everyone has crazy relatives. You’ll find all of the above in her novels.

Susan lives in Greenville, SC, with her husband and an inordinate number of houseplants.

Filed Under: about, Uncategorized

Who’s Who in Stella Maris

June 12, 2012 in extras, Uncategorized

Folks You’ll Need to KnowWho Their People AreWhat They DoCommon Knowledge
Andrews, NateLiz Talbot’s partner and ex-brother-in-lawPrivate InvestigatorHe is hot.
Andrews, ScottLiz Talbot’s ex-husband and Nate’s brotherOwns private equity firm in Greenville, SCHe is a snake.
Bradley, KristenMerry Talbot’s roommatePharmaceutical sales repShe’s a little free with her favors.
Butler, WillaOne of Clive and Dahlia Butler’s girlsSurgeonShe’s the closest thing we have to a voodoo priestess
Causby, HaydenPart of the Causby clan from Mt. PleasantShrimperHe went to prison for 15 years on drug charges.
Causby, TroyHayden’s grandsonThugMerry Talbot’s been seeing him, but her daddy doesn’t know it.
Cooper, ClayBill and Nell Cooper’s boyPolice Officer, Stella Maris PDHe’s always been a little sweet on Liz.
Cooper, BillClay’s father and Nell’s husbandHe owns Cooper’s Dry CleanersHe’s a straight arrow.
Cooper, Nell Avalee BakerThe Bakers are an old Stella Maris family.Office Mgr. & Dispatcher for Stella Maris PDShe basically runs things at the police department.
Devlin, AdamMichael’s brother, Kate’s older sonManages Steven’s Hardware, owned by his wife’s familyHe thinks mighty highly of himself.
Devlin, Deanna StevensAdam’s wifeWorks in hardware store, mostly home décorShe’s as sweet as she can be.
Devlin, HollyAdam and Deanna’s younger daughterGoes to kindergarten 
Devlin, IsabellaAdam and Deanna’s older daughterShe’s in first grade. 
Devlin, Kate SullivanAdam and Michael’s mother, the Devlins and the Sullivans have lived on Stella Maris foreverShe’s retired from working as a secretary to a judge.Bless her heart, she’s had a hard life. Raised those two boys by herself.
Devlin, Marci MillerMichael’s wife, Liz’s cousinWorks as a teller at the bankHer daddy was no account. Her poor mamma drank herself to death.
Devlin, MichaelAdam’s brother, Kate’s son, Marci’s husbandOwns a construction companyHe’s on the town council–represents District One.
Devlin, StuartAdam and Michael’s father, Kate’s husbandHe’s been dead twenty-five years.He left to go sailing one Sunday and never came back–lost at sea.
DiTomei, Phoebe BiancaShe’s not from here–moved down from Brooklyn about ten years back.Owns and operates Phoebe’s Day SpaShe does the best color in three states.
Douglas, Casey JaneShe moved down from Orangeburg about nine-ten years ago.Waitress at The Pirate’s DenShe has a pierced belly button.
Glendawn, Alma FergusonJohn’s wife, Elvis and Moon Unit’s motherWorks with John at the Pirate’s DenShe’s a good woman, but a little nutty. Saw Elvis Presley last week at the Piggly Wiggly.
Glendawn, ElvisJohn and Alma’s son, Moon Unit’s brotherRides his bike on patrol unofficially for the Stella Maris PDHe’s developmentally challenged. He’s 29 on the outside and 14 on the inside.
Glendawn, JohnAlma’s husband. The Glendawns have been in Stella Maris forever.Owns and operates The Pirate’s DenHe’s on the town council–represents District Two.
Glendawn, Moon UnitJohn and Alma’s oldest child, Elvis’s sisterOwns and operates The Cracked Pot, the island’s dinerShe’s a talker. Some of the women at Phoebe’s Day Spa think Moon is sweet on Blake.
Harper, ElenoreWarren Harper’s first wifeMaid for Calista McQueenThey have three children, but she abandoned them and Warren years ago. No one’s heard tell of her in years. Then, recently, she turned up working as a maid for that new woman in town, Calista McQueen. She’s not right in the head.
Harper, WarrenMoved down from Asheville, NC in 1987Town doctor and medical examiner when neededHis first wife was a loon. His second wife, Lauren, is sweet as sugar.
Jacobs, CharlieThe Jacobs have been around for yearsRetired as chief of police in 2005His wife, Myrna Lynne, had family money, which was how he could retire so young.
Johnson, HankThe Johnsons have been around a spell.Local judgeHis wife, Shannelle, is certifiable, but she knows how to accessorize. She’s Myrna Lynne’s sister.
Lyerly, Tammy SueShe was a Ketchie before she married Zeke Lyerly. Her people are from Atlanta.Operates a booth in a local flea market selling handmade items.She’s high-strung and prone to radical hair color changes.
Lyerly, ZekeHe says he’s originally from Atlanta, but he says a lot of things.Owns and operates Lyerly’s Auto RepairHe’s a good ole boy with a vivid imagination.
Manigault, Alicia RiversThe Rivers family has been in Stella Maris forever. Alicia married Sam Manigault.Works at the Stella Maris Hotel, her family’s business.Alicia was Blake Talbot’s high school girlfriend, but Liz and Merry never warmed up to her.
Manigault, SamThe Manigaults have been around a right long time.Police Officer, Stella Maris PDSam is positively besotted with that wife of his. She leads him around with ring through his nose.
McQueen, CalistaShe’s new in town.UnknownNo one knows who her people are. She keeps to herself. If she has a job, no one knows what she does. No one knows a thing about her, but Moon Unit is working on it.
Miller, PaulA surfer who showed up one summer and ran off with Sharon Talbot.Worked for a while with Sharon’s daddy, Ben, in landscaping.Ran off in 1988. Whereabouts unknown.
Miller, Sharon TalbotBen and Emma Rae Talbot’s oldest child. Marci Miller Devlin’s mother.Never held a job.Drank herself to death in 2001, three months after Marci married Michael.
Morehead, DavidNobody knows where he came from.Works for New Life Foundation, those folks Merry’s dealing withNo one knows a thing about him except that he uses a lot of hair gel and carries a man purse.
Murphy, RodneyMoved here from Minneapolis in 2005. His folks came the following year. Nice people.Police Officer, Stella Maris PDHe’s a quiet boy, keeps to himself.
Owen, Quincy Executive Director of New Life Foundation 
Pearson, Humphrey SinclaireHis mamma was a Waters. Both the Pearsons and Waters have been in Stella Maris forever.He’s an activist. He protests things, mostly drug laws.Something fried this poor man’s brains. He’s stuck in 1969, and can’t keep his clothes on.
Pearson, Olivia BeauthorpeThe Beauthorpes were the first family on this island. Robert Pearson’s wife, Liz’s friend from high school.Soccer momShe’s a little high strung. If her fourth great-granddaddy hadn’t been a gambler, the Beauthorpes might still own the whole island.
Pearson, RobertThe Pearsons have been in Stella Maris forever. Olivia’s husbandLawyerHe’s on the town council–represents District Six.
Ravenel, SonnyLives in Charleston. There are Ravenels all over Charleston, and a few in Stella Maris.Police Officer, Charleston PDSonny and Blake Talbot go way back.
Smithers, LuellaWife of Emmett Smithers, moved here in 1995 from Birmingham, ALPreacher’s wifeShe makes the best shrimp salad anyone’s ever tasted.
Smithers, Reverend EmmettMoved here in 1995 from Birmingham, ALPreacher at Stella Maris Baptist ChurchHe has TV preacher hair.
Stevens, ColleenLiz’s best friend. Deanna Stevens Devlin’s sister. Daughter of Walter and Myra StevensDrowned her junior year in high school while swimming in Breach InletAnyone with a speck of sense knows better than to swim there.
Stevens, MyraColleen and Deanna’s mother, Walter’s wifeRetiredShe’s a sweet lady, but maybe pushed those girls too hard.
Stevens, WalterColleen and Deanna’s father, Myra’s husbandOwns Stevens Hardware, but has retired and let Adam and Deanna run it. 
Sullivan, GraceLiz’s Godmother, Caroline Talbot’s best friend, Henry’s sister, Lincoln’s second cousinOwns and operates Sullivan’s Bed and BreakfastShe’s the local psychic–the real deal. Also serves on town council–District Five.
Sullivan, HenryGrace’s brother, Mac’s father, Lincoln’s second cousin. Married Nancy EmersonRector at St. Frances Episcopal 
Sullivan, Lincoln ElishaMildred’s husband, second cousin to Grace and Henry, Mac’s great uncleMayor of Stella Maris 
Sullivan, Mackenzie EmersonSon of Henry and Nancy Sullivan, Grace’s nephewLawyer, town solicitorHe’s been a pompous boy his whole life.
Sullivan, Mildred KingsleySeems like her people are from Charleston. Married the mayor, Lincoln SullivanMayor’s wifeShe holds that it’s her duty to set high moral standards for the community–ask her.
Sullivan, Nancy EmersonThe Emersons are from Charleston. She married Henry Sullivan.Rector’s wife 
Talbot, BenjaminLiz’s grandfather. Emma Rae’s husband. The Talbots have been in Stella Maris forever.He passed on in 1992. 
Talbot, BlakeLiz’s older brother by one yearStella Maris Chief of PoliceHe could have been a great many things if he’d been willing to leave Stella Maris. Thank the Good Lord he stayed. But living on a houseboat and playing part-time in a band are unusual in a police chief.
Talbot, Carolyn MooreLiz, Blake and Merry’s mother. The Moores are from Sullivan’s Island.Active church volunteer, housewifeShe’s taken up Jazzercise, and wears some interesting outfits for her workouts.
Talbot, Emma Rae SimmonsLiz, Blake, Merry and Marci’s grandmother. She was a Simmons, and they’ve been here forever.She was a homemaker, mother and grandmotherShe was on the town council–District Three. Loved to throw parties.
Talbot, FrankEmma Rae and Ben’s son. Liz, Blake and Merry’s father. Caroline’s husband.Retired from an accounting position in CharlestonHe’s a character.
Talbot, HarrisonBen Talbot’s brother. Liz, Blake and Merry’s great uncleRetired investment bankerHe loves money better than anything.
Talbot, LizEmma Rae’s granddaughter, Blake and Merry’s sister, Frank and Caroline’s girlPrivate InvestigatorShe’s still pining for Michael Devlin ten years after he married her cousin Marci.
Talbot, MerryLiz’s younger sister by 2 yearsExecutive Director of Teen Council in CharlestonShe’s a sweet girl, but she has a wild streak.
Vardry, AtticusThe Vardrys are an established Greenville family.RetiredHe hired Liz and Nate to find his granddaughter who ran away in September.
Walker, Mr. & Mrs.The Walkers are from Greenville Mrs. Walker hired Liz and Nate to document Mr. Walker’s infidelity.
Waters, VernThe Waters have been in Stella Maris forever.Owns and operates The Stella Maris Citizen, the local newspaper 
Watson, CoyMoved here from West Virginia in 1993Still a bartender at the Pirate’s Den even though he’s past retirement age.He’s got some colorful family back in West Virginia.
RhettLiz’s Golden Retriever  
ChumleyFrank and Caroline’s Bassett Hound  

Filed Under: extras, Uncategorized

Release Date Announced!

June 12, 2012 in News, Uncategorized

Lowcountry Boil will be released from Henery Press on September 18, 2012!

Filed Under: News, Uncategorized

Daphne du Maurier Finalist!

June 12, 2012 in News, Uncategorized

Lowcountry Boil finaled in the Mainstream category of the 2012 Daphne du Maurier.

Filed Under: News, Uncategorized

Golden Heart Final!

June 12, 2012 in News, Uncategorized

Lowcountry Boil finaled in the Golden Heart in the Novel with Strong Romantic Elements category!

Filed Under: News, Uncategorized

Lowcountry Boil

June 8, 2012 in books, The Liz Talbot Mystery Series, Uncategorized

Filed Under: books, The Liz Talbot Mystery Series, Uncategorized

The Number One Reason I’ve Had No Time to Blog

May 12, 2010 in Evidence of My Insanity, Family, Road Trip, Uncategorized

Things have been intense lately. I’ve been traveling almost non-stop. Here are a few highlights from the road:

  • Last visit to Indiana, while we were on a side trip to Amish country for pickles, the police raided our hotel. They brought the drug dogs and everything. Seems one of the locals had rented a hotel room to hang out at the pool and smoke some weed. Someone must have reported the smell. This was big news here, as we’re in a very wholesome, family-oriented part of Indiana .
  • Last trip to Jasper, AL, we NARROWLY missed an F-3 tornado, which formed virtually on top of us, then moved on to the next county where it did a lot of damage. I love Jasper, but I am SO not going back there in spring or summer. The Husband has strict instructions he can only work there in fall and winter.
  • On a happy note, the hotel in Jasper now has a Belgian waffle maker. The Queen of Pain now has a few waffles to work off of me when I get home.
  • I made a quick trip home to Faith, where I spent most of an entire day chauffeuring my dad (who is young and perfectly able to drive himself) to various doctor’s offices so he could talk to the poor receptionists and nurses about this curious coating on his tongue and throat. Now, most folks will call and make an appointment to see the doctor. Not my daddy. He doesn’t like dealing with the automated answering machines that require him to press one to make an appointment, et cetera. He just drops in. To his credit, this has proven to be effective in that these nurses will do ANYTHING to get him to stop showing them his tongue. I can relate, which explains why I was driving him on this fool’s errand.

As exciting as all of this is, the number one reason I’ve had no time to blog is that I’ve been busy lurking over at Do the Write Thing for Nashville where I’ve been busy plotting my strategy for scoring some of the goodies.

I had my heart set on the manuscript consultation by none other than Janet Reid. I’ve had a little ebay experience, so I strategized waiting until the very last minute and placing one bid–but WAY before midnight last night the bidding got too rich for my bank account.

Then, I set my sights on five days at Kari Lynn Dell’s ranch in Montana–only to be quickly left in the bidding dust. This one is still open, and a bargain for anyone who has ever wanted to go to Montana. I think the bidding closes at midnight tonight.

I hear that tomorrow Barbara Poelle and Holly Root have a combo meeting at RWA or BEA going on the block. I’m glued to my PC. but I have a sinking feeling this one will go for big bucks as well.

Y’all check it out–there’s a lot of great stuff being auctioned for a great cause!

Peace, out…

Susan

Filed Under: Evidence of My Insanity, Family, Road Trip, Uncategorized Tagged With: Evidence of My Insanity, Family, Road Trip

Time Flies When You’re Losing Your Mind

June 28, 2007 in Uncategorized

Okay, yes, I know…that rocket left the launch pad a while back. But, unlikely as it may seem, it continues to thrust ever further into space…the final frontier. I’m getting loonier. I have proof.

Today was dermatologist day–always traumatic. I have a skin malfunction that basically ensures I’ll never grow out of the oily-occasional-breakout-teenage phase. On the up side, oily skin gets fewer wrinkles. Anyway, today was a follow up, which I have come to believe translates to, “The day you have to go to the doctor so he can get his cut on the office visit before refilling your prescriptions.” I don’t hold that against the dermatologist. I think most doctors operate that way, and who can blame them? They have vacation homes to pay for.

Today, I also had a mole check. I bet some of you see where this is headed. I am one of the very pale skinned women who slathered themselves with baby oil and iodine and baked for hours to a bright, lobster red trying to achieve a suntan during my teenage years. Since I grew a brain, I have also had several accidental sunburns. So, once in a while, a dermatologist looks me over for suspicious moles.

This was my first general mole check with this doctor. Some of you might recall the dramatic, very specific mole check that brought me to this good man. So does he. Which possibly explains why this appointment was mysteriously bumped several times due to emergencies.

After a general chat about my teenage skin, why I need to use sunscreen, et cetera, kindly doctor Harper (not his real name) left the room so Nurse could drape me. This is where I take off everything except my underwear and she gives me a sheet for my legs, and a swatch of cotton about the size of a wash cloth. She hands me the cloth. “This is for your top.”

I just looked at her.

She took another look and me and went to find a bigger wash cloth. Finally, we were all set, and Dr. Harper came back in. I chattered away about couldn’t he just sandblast my whole body and give it that air-brushed look that models in magazines had while he looked me over with a magnifying glass. Literally.

I noticed he was paying a lot of attention to a red place on my shoulder. He measured, frowned, and made some notes. “How long has this been here?” he asked.

I told him I really couldn’t say, but why was he asking?

“Is it a scar?”

“I don’t think so,” I said. I thought back, and couldn’t imagine how I would have gotten a scar on my shoulder. I didn’t recall ever injuring it.

“It might be a cancerous spot,” he said, in a tone like he was saying we might have a shower later this afternoon, “or it could be a scar.”

Now, I’m thinking, this guy’s a dermatologist, and with a magnifying glass, he can’t tell the difference between a scar and cancer? But I say, of course, “Let’s get that sucker off of there right now.”

He frowned at me. “It’s really just something we need to watch.”

“Watch?? Why? Just take it off.”

“I’ll check it again in fours months, and we’ll see if it’s grown any.” He knew I’d have to come back in a month to get the refills on my teenage skin prescriptions, but he wanted to check what MIGHT BE CANCER in four months??

As you probably can guess, I did not take this well. I began to hyperventilate. “Dr. Harper, really, what’s the down side to removing something that MIGHT BE Cancer right this very minute?”

“Well, this is the type of thing we see every day. We really just need to watch it,” he said, in that father-knows-best-voice.

“Listen, Dr. Harper, I’m a little nutty”–like he didn’t know that already–“and I really think we’ll both be better off if you just get out the scalpel and get rid of whatever that is on my shoulder, because otherwise, I will lie awake and worry about it. I will obsess about it. I will drive everyone I know crazy.”

He sighed. Deeply. “You know, I really wish I’d said, ‘Hmmm, looks like you have a scar on your shoulder.'”

Again, I asked him what possible downside there was to removing the thing.

“It’s like when you go to the doctor, and he tells you that your cholesterol is high, and we need to watch it.”

I persisted. “What’s the downside?”

“It will leave a scar,” he said. He really said that. About this time, he started furiously scribbling my prescriptions.

I was flabbergasted. “But it already looks like a scar, and it MIGHT BE CANCER.”

“You wouldn’t have a doctor remove your appendix just because it might give you trouble,” he argued.

I smiled, triumphantly. “Oh yes I would. I already have.”

He cocked his head and squinted his eyes at me. “Well, if they were already in there…” He stood up and handed me my prescriptions. “See you in a month. I’ll take a look at it then.” He started rushing out the door. Over his should he said, “There’s a lot of things we could all be worried about. Forget about this and pick something else.” So now he’s my psychologist, too??

I stewed on the way to the pharmacy.

I stewed all the way home.

If he wouldn’t take the thing off, I’d find a dermatologist who would. Too bad the quack I used to see left town without notice. He’d lop anything off I asked him too, without so much as blinking. Why, he’d once taken off three or four moles in one office visit. One on my stomach, two on my arms, and… it stuck me like a thunderbolt… one on my shoulder.

The thing I wanted Dr. Harper to remove was the scar from where Dr. Left-Town-In-The-Middle-Of-The-Night had removed a mole years ago.

I think.

Y’all know how bad my memory is…

At least I can tell myself that until I go back for my teenage skin follow-up, which is a good thing, because we leave for tomorrow on vacation with my mamma and daddy and my sister and her husband. We’re going to Jackson Hole, Wyoming, and will be spending time in Yellowstone and Grand Tetons National Park. My family has little patience with my insanity. If I were to exhibit signs of obsessing about this mole/scar that MIGHT BE CANCER, one of them would likely drown me in the Snake River, or throw me out of a hot air balloon.

I’m already on my sister’s list because I packed a skirt, and that was not on the approved wardrobe packing list in the professionally bound trip book she prepared for us. Y’all probably won’t believe this, but she’s much crazier than I am.

Peace, out…

Susan


Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: Evidence of My Insanity

It’s a Sad, Sad, Sad, Sad World

May 3, 2007 in Uncategorized

I don’t do sad. I don’t like to see sad movies or read sad books. And I really don’t write about sad things. Disturbing things, sometimes, but never sad. There’s far too must sad in reality. I like my escapism pleasant. And truth be told, I write to escape. It’s like creating this alternate reality that you can climb into where you control everyone and everything. There’s not a doubt in my mind that there’s a clinical name for that, and somewhere, folks like me are locked up for their own protection and that of others.

Anyway, when this blog goes quiet, one of two things is happening: either I’m juggling too many balls and have dropped one, or too many sad things are going on around me. Lately, it’s a little of both. I am trying to do too much. One of my personalities–y’all know I’m slightly schizophrenic, right? And before somebody gets all offended about me making fun of crazy people, just let me tell you that I’m also a hypochondriac. So I’m not sure if I’m truly schizophrenic, or if I’m just imagining it cause I sometimes exhibit the classic symptoms, but, either way, I in no way mean to ridicule crazy people. I am definitely a part of that club, either way you slice it.

I digress. One of my personalities (see above) agreed to be this year’s conference chairperson for the South Carolina Writers Workshop Conference. I thought, This will be fun. And it is. It is also a job that I work at 10 – 12 hours every day. This is a volunteer position. I think it was Suzanne that agreed to this–she loves a party. Loves to entertain. This is just like something she’d stick me with. So, I’m busy.

But there’s also too much sadness going on around me right now. But I can’t write about that stuff–I just can’t. And sometimes, it overwhelms me and I can’t escape into my imaginary worlds anymore.

And now the bees. This thing with the bees isn’t sad–it’s scary as hell. On top of being blue, I’m freaked out by the bees. Have y’all been reading about this? I had not heard a word about it. I almost never watch the news. You rarely get good news from Fox or CNN, and I have doubts about how straight a scoop you get from any of them anyway. So I had not heard about the bees.

Then, Sunday evening we we sitting on my brother-in-law’s deck having perfectly grilled steaks when a wasp flew by. I have an aversion to being stung, and wanted someone to kill it. My brother-in-law has a garden, and, who knew, wasps apparently (at least according to him) pollinate some of the stuff he grows. I want to state for the record that I have no knowledge of any of the specific crops in his field. Anyway, he wouldn’t hear of swatting the wasp.

Then, he launched into this (at the time I thought typically nutcase) sermon about how all the honeybees are dying out, which will cause all of our crops to fail which will cause us all to starve. I was rolling my eyes because my brother-in-law, like most of my husband’s family, (none of whom read blogs) are all loony.

Then, this morning, in the Greenville News, which I do read every morning, right there on page 6A–right beside the stuff about Iraq–is the headline, “Bee Die-off Endangers Food Chain,” and a picture of a worried-looking scientist in a bee suit with a tray of dead bees. Even certifiable fruitcakes say something sane every now and again, so you can’t just ignore everything that comes out of their mouths like you might think.

It seems some sort of disease or parasite has caused something called Colony Collapse Disorder. You might know they’d call it a disorder. Apparently, we now have to be politically correct when discussing bees, cause, you know, we don’t want to offend. Anyway, this Disorder is responsible for U.S. beekeepers losing a quarter of their bees in the last few months. According to someone at the USDA, this is the biggest threat to our food supply. And don’t you know the price of honey is going through the roof.

Here’s something else to lie awake and worry about. I’m counting on what usually happens in these scenarios: tomorrow or the next day some other expert will chime in as to how this is a normal, cyclical thing–like global warming–and there’s no cause for panic. And, people like me, who tend to obsess about stuff like this, will grab hold of that like a life preserver and tell ourselves that so we can sleep at night. Whether it has any basis in fact or not.

Peace, out…

Susan

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: Blather and Profound Notions, Family

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