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When people ask me what I write, I tell them that I write ‘southern women's fiction'. To clarify, I usually follow that with the (hopefully) more clear ‘grit lit.' Although that frequently elicits a grin or two, it rarely seems to explain what it is that I try to create on the pages of my novels.
I stick with the adage of ‘write what I know' and I know the south. Although I've only lived in the south for less than half of my years, I come from a long line of southerners. My father's family has lived in the south since before the American Revolution and both of my parents were born and raised in Mississippi-my father on the gulf coast and my mother in the Delta. I have relatives still living there who most people from other parts of the country would need a translator to understand. But when I hear them speak, I simply feel as if I have found home.







As humans, we are fascinated by "superfluous people in the service of brute power," as Ryszard Kapuscinski put it (see 