All Things Southern
All Things Southern




Home     Contact     Calendar     Book Shellie     Media Kit     F.A.Q.     TV     Radio     Shop     Community


Home
Past Issues
Southern Jokes
Southern Recipes
Southern Spotlight
Southern Quotes
Southern Comforts
Southern Definition
My Photo Journals
Search My Site

Book Shellie!
Radio Info
TV Info
ATS Word Game
ATS Affilates
Ministry Opportunites




Books and CD's
Fine Art
T-Shirts
Kitchen Gifts
Good Eats
Porch Donations








Upcoming Projects
Gator Giveaway
Yellow Ribbon Gallery
Link to ATS
Favorite Links



From the Publisher's Porch
Shellie Rushing Tomlinson

************************************
Volume I Issue I

Hello and welcome to the inaugural issue of All Things Southern. I'm very excited about celebrating my southern heritage with you. I believe in a South that hasn’t been getting a lot of press, a genteel way of life where neighbors form bonds as strong as the giant oaks and pecan trees that dot our land, a place of good manners, strong values, special people and fine food. I want to meet you here on my cyber porch in the tradition of our grandparents to swap stories, laughs and inspiration.

With respect to Mr.Foxworthy, whom I'm sure is a fine man, and certainly a very funny one, our South is more than trailer trash and rednecks. For this reason you'll find very little redneck humor in our "Chuckles" features. (Though there might be a smidgen of Yankee jokes to even the score.)

If cooking is your passion, check out "The Taste of the South", a weekly look at our delicious southern dishes.

Maybe you're as tired as I am of the bad news that screams from the headlines and blares from our televisions. If so, you'll enjoy our "Southern Spotlight" where we'll shine our beam on the south's finest people, places and events.

Many great authors and orators have called the south home, along with a lot of common folk with uncommon wisdom. In "It's Been Said" we'll take a look at some famous southern quotes.

Our "Southern Comfort" feature might sound familiar, but it's more than a pint of pick-me-up; it's a dose of inspiration from my heart to yours.

In the end, I hope you'll be so entertained by our features, amused by our jokes and quotes, and tempted by our cooking, that you'll weigh in with your own. I look forward to hearing from you for our "Southern Exchange."

And please, if you have friends who might enjoy this FREE emag, would you do me a big neighborly favor and forward this copy to them? Maybe they'll decide to subscribe and join our southern celebration.
Until next week...

Warm regards, Shellie
************************************
Volume I Issue II
Wow! Last week's long awaited launch was a lot of fun for me--and scary too! Things are moving pretty quickly around here. (Hmmm...this is probably how the mad scientist felt when he created Frankenstein!)

As a way of furthering our introduction, this week's porch talk is a bit of an autobiography; I hope you enjoy it. I'd love to hear more about each of you as well. Drop me a line sometime.

I was nine when I wrote my first book, MARTHA AND HER HORSE. It had eighty-seven pages and chapter titles like "Trouble in the Pasture". Okay, so it wasn't WAR AND PEACE, but I had a story in me--and I needed to tell it. My mother proudly read excerpts of this literary wonder to anyone she could lasso into listening.

I'm thirty-eight. I still love words and my reason for writing hasn't changed; I need to tell stories. Unfortunately, without Mama's strong-arm tactics, finding an audience has proven more difficult. For years I scratched my words on the back of grocery lists and children's dentists' appointments, or piled them next to each other in notebooks and crammed them in dresser drawers and closets. Then, about a year ago, I admitted to myself that I wanted to tell my stories to other people. And so began my odyssey into the publishing world. Remember Dorothy waking up in Oz and Alice falling down the rabbit hole? Good, the analogy works--

Like Dorothy's Oz and Alice's wonderland, the publishing world is an elusive and distant land with its own time system, language and laws. Slowly, through careful observation, I've been able to ascertain much about this alien culture.

The inhabitants of Publisher Land are a hardworking group of people with a special affinity for riddles--as evidenced by their common mantra: Show me your clips. "Clips" are paper trophies, copies of your past glories, proof that you've been published before. You need these clips; you must have them in order to get clips. (No, you can't buy clips.) Sound impossible? Welcome to Publisher Land.

The law of the land is simple. If you've been published, you can get published. If you haven't been published you need to get published, so you can be published. Your chances of getting published are much better if you have an agent. Oh yeah, that reminds me, most agents like to represent people that have already been published.

I've determined there are actually only six people running Publisher Land. Writer's Market 2001 lists at least one-gazillion editors (a gazillion is a little more than a million). But I think most of them are the same person because their letters are suspiciously similar. All six of these people speak publisher-ease, a second language I've been somewhat successful in learning. For example: their letters might say "we regret to inform you that after carefully reviewing your manuscript we feel it's not right for our present needs". This should be read as "you haven't been published before and pigs will fly before we take the first chance."

Just as their words have different meanings, so the laws of time in Publisher Land are different also. Often a letter from a publishing house will say they hope to have a firm reply concerning your manuscript in twelve to fourteen weeks. You might think this is a month or two. The people in Publisher Land will be laughing at you. They know it means sometime this calendar year--if you're lucky.

I say, let 'em laugh. I've just begun to fight. I'm playing their game and getting better at it all the time. I've read books on writing and books about books about writing. And just recently I've had a couple of small victories. Nothing grand--no six-figure advances-just enough success to throw gas on my word fire. But that's okay. I still have an ace in the hole; a back-up plan I don't think Publisher Land is ready for--Mama the Literary Agent. It's worked before.

Until next week...

Warm regards,
Shellie
************************************
Volume I Issue III
The sun isn't always shining when friends meet on the front porch to visit, but we reach for that fellowship to somehow break through the gloom. And so it is this morning as I meet you, my new friends, on my cyber porch for our weekly visit.

I struggled with sending an issue out this week in the face of the pain and sorrow facing our nation. Can I be honest? For a moment I worried that with such a brand-new readership, my little publication might not survive skipping an issue so soon...and you have all been so loyal and kind to read the previous issues and pass them on. And then I immediately felt horrible about such a terribly selfish train of thought.

"All Things Southern" was born to be a celebration, and clearly, it is impossible to celebrate the South as our nation reels from the blows of her enemy.

For that reason, you won't find many of our lighter features in today's issue. Those features will remain silent in respect to our fallen Americans. Only this column, the "Southern Quote", the "Southern Comfort" and the "Southern Exchange" will be updated at http://www.allthingssouthern.com.

As I attempt to add my words to those of all the t.v. anchors, journalists, and leaders of our nation, I feel wholly inadequate. Words fail...plans fail...buildings fall...and lives are lost--but the spirit survives. And this is where my thoughts turn today.

As Tuesday's incredible events unfolded I was struck over and over by the strength and beauty of the human spirit. I heard of nurses and doctors in New York who worked throughout the day and into the night trying to save the lives of their fellow Americans; though many of them were married to NYC firemen and policemen and could get no word on whether their own spouses were dead or alive.

I watched the faces of relief workers and saw the compassion and love sending them in and out of those burning, unstable buildings--each of them fully aware they were risking their own lives. A risk from which it now seems many did not survive.

So what was I seeing? I believe we saw the best and the worst of mankind Tuesday. We saw an evil that is immortal, that resides in human souls, but comes from another realm.

And the best? We saw in each compassionate touch, in each act of love and sacrifice, the characteristics of another immortal power--the Omnipotent One--our God, who will one day put an end to the evil in this world.

I believe His heart aches with ours, but He has given people free reign now, on this earth, to choose between His great love and the evil of His enemy.

I pray that today you will be able to turn from the horror, the evil and pain, to lean against the chest of the ONE who sits on the throne.

Until next week...

With sincere thoughts and prayers,
Shellie
************************************
Volume I Issue IV
Hey everybody! I'm glad it's Thursday. I'm really beginning to look forward to our weekly visits. It's actually kind of addictive on this end--I just hope it's becoming a nice habit for you as well. (she smiles)

First things first: Please know that my heart still aches, and my prayers continue for the victims of last Tuesday's tragedies. Life has changed for us all. And yet, I very much want to comply with our president's request to return to as much normalcy in our lives as possible. I support the tone Mr. Bush has set for this great nation. It is a very balanced message--emphasizing honor and respect for our fallen Americans and patriotism to our country, all forged with a commitment and determination to the job at hand.

So, with those thoughts in mind, ALL THINGS SOUTHERN is back in its entirety. Please, pull your chairs on in closer and sit a spell.

It started innocently enough...I never set out to do an alligator issue. It just so happened that it was time to announce the winner of the GREAT GATOR GIVE-A-WAY. The lucky winner is named below and posted on the website. Now don't peek, stay with me...( I know, you couldn't help it.)

After that, well, I guess I was on a 'gator wavelength because, I found this neat web site to profile in the "Southern Spotlight". By then it was 'Gator Mania--full steam ahead. I hope you enjoy yourselves. I'm sure I'll shake this thing before I see you again.

Until next week...

Warm regards,
Shellie
************************************
Volume I Issue V
Hello everyone, and welcome to the porch! I've been thinking about family today. Few things are as treasured in the south as our families. I hope all is well with yours...

My sisters both came in to visit this weekend. It was fun; we fell into familiar family patterns easily. I could almost hear the chords of the old song by Sister Sledge,

"We are family, I have all my sisters with me. All the people around us they say, can they be that close? Just let me say for the record, We're giving love in a family dose..."

Webster defines a sister as "a female human being having the same parents as another person." Right--if you have a sister, then you know "a female human being" would be one of the nicer things you've called her.

The late Charles M. Schultz, creator of the Peanuts gang, once said, "Big sisters are the crab grass in the lawn of life." This from the man who gave us Lucy, as near perfect an example of the big sister as literature will ever produce. Like most big sisters, Lucy invested herself fully in the role. In one of Mr. Schultz's earlier strips, Feb. 1954, we see her watching a clock as the minute hands advance. On the hour she screams "BEDTIME!" at her little brother, Linus , who promptly flips in mid-air from the force of her announcement. I'm with you, Linus--been there, lived that.

"Families are about learning to overcome emotional torture." I love this quote by Matt Groeing, it could well speak to sisterhood's greatest weapon: mental abuse. Nothing is off limits here. Find their insecurities and exploit them to your advantage. Be it their toes or their rears, their nose or their ears, when growing up with sisters--it's all fair game.

Side by side you live with this person this aggravating person. And then one day you grow up--and little things begin to remind you of the good times you shared. A flashback of late night giggle attacks returns, rare nights when you forgot to fight and lay in bed laughing at nothing and everything. The memory is pleasant, so you stir the pot and others float to the top. You have to smile when you remember that as mean as your sister was to you--she reserved her fiercest anger for your enemies. Growing up with sisters is like living with the mob. Sure, they're rough, but it's nice to have 'em around when someone calls you out.

You can't pretend with sisters either. They know you in a way no one else does. When I recall my childhood, my sisters are the main characters--my parents, the directors. My father provided for me; my sisters played with me. My mom gave us our bath; my sisters splashed soap in my eyes. Even my husband, with whom I also share a past, knows me only as the girl I was when we met, and the person I've become during our lives together. My sisters have the total picture; they remember when I wore hoot-owl glasses and corrective shoes.

As sisters, we even define ourselves by ourselves. I am the baby; (my sisters would say the spoiled one, which proves they still lie.) We think of our middle sister as the peacemaker, and the eldest as the rebel. Our roles are comfortable; we've been typecast for life. When grown-up sisters get together you can almost strip away the conversation and see the little girls they used to be.

As an adult I now value my sister relationships. If you have a sister and you haven't arrived there, I hope you will soon. The old proverb, blood is thicker than water--they were talking about sister blood. Life with her can be a complicated, competitive, stormy experience--that evolves into a wonderful friendship. Maybe you have a great relationship with your sister; maybe you're still fighting. The fact remains, you can't escape shared history. In spite of everything you love about her, and everything you don't, she lived with you through the experiences that made you who you are. And that's why you can say with me, "I love her, I love her not, I love her--(she's my sister)."

Until next week...

Warm regards,
Shellie
P.S. If you have a sister that might enjoy these thoughts, or a friend with a sister who could identify, I invite you to send our little chat along. Happy thoughts to sisters everywhere!
************************************
Volume I Issue VI
Hello. Welcome back to the porch. Today's conversation is about southern courtesy, good manners, call it what you want--is it myth or reality? That's my question.

A note from a subscriber this past weekend got me to thinking. You see, I was pulling for my LSU tigers this past Saturday, and Bill, a new friend and subscriber from Tennessee, was pulling for his Vols. Leading up to the big game we had a great time via email exchanging threats and bets. And then my Tigers went down--hard. Glumly, I sat down at my computer, hat in hand, to compose my letter to Bill with the proper amount of humility. Bill's response was immediate and gracious, allowing me plenty room to wiggle and even reminisce about past Tiger victories. Small thing? Sure. Southern thing? Maybe and maybe not, you tell me.

In the South, manners or the lack of them, are a direct reflection on parents; lectures on proper etiquette begin early. "Thank you", "please", "yes ma'am--no ma'am", the lessons start simple, becoming more involved as the child matures. Elbows on the table? Heaven forbid! And even the youngest Southern children know not to leave the table without a courteous reference to the cook, however short and sweet it might be: "Thanks, Mom. That was good." Over the years the themes graduate to more serious crimes: Never, but never, allow two guests to remain in the same room without introducing them.

Are these teachings unique to our geographical region? Are some states more gracious than others? Write me and submit your anecdotes of growing up under the rules of southern graciousness, courtesy and manners. (Maybe we'll make it a state to state competition.) I'll print a few next week. Until then--

Hugs, Shellie
************************************
Volume I Issue VII
Welcome! Has it really been a week since we met here on the porch? Come on in closer, but watch out for everyone's toes. Thanks to all of you forwarding our chats the porch is getting crowded! Not that I'm complaining! On the contrary, I'm grateful. I really appreciate it.

I don't know what the weather is like in your corner of the world, but it's beautiful where I am. Fall is one of my favorite times of the year here in the Deep South. The days are pleasant and the nights are cool.

Harvest is winding down, bringing a sense of relief to our community that is almost audible. Almost all of our area farmers have raced Mother Nature and won, successfully bringing in their crops ahead of the winter rains. Now their days are spent preparing the ground for next year.

Once again I saw many travelers pull over to the side of our roads and highways these past few months to inspect our crops up close. It was these people that inspired the "Ag Products" page of my online store. If you have friends and relatives outside our region, won't you tell them where to find these souvenirs of our Delta's bounty?

I hope you enjoy this week's issue. The "Southern Exchange" continues our discussion on good manners. Forgive me if I didn't get your thoughts posted, I tried to strike an interesting note with the variety.
Until next week...

Hugs,
Shellie
************************************
Volume I Issue VIII
Hey everyone, welcome back to the porch! I wish I could offer you all a glass of ice cold tea, but virtual refreshment doesn't quite hit the spot, does it?

I appreciate everyone who has written in asking about Phillip. (For those just joining us, my son is out for the rest of the football season with an ACL injury.) Phillip is hard at work rehabing the muscles around the knee and his spirits are good. He's been measured for a new brace and the doctors still think he has a good chance of being able to put off surgery until after his baskeball season! As for Mom, after years of holding my breath and watching him quarterback--I can't get used to seeing him standing on the sidelines, drying the ball between plays.

We lost Friday night. Bummer! It was an away game and the field was located way too close to a cotton gin. Every now and then when the wind got just right, the nasty smell of the gin trash overwhelmed us. (Sidebar for my Yankee friends: Gin trash is the refuse that comes from the cotton gin after the cotton is processed. It's great fertilizer for your flower beds and excellent at opening up your sinuses.) When our Rebels lost, someone next to me commented wryly that the night stunk all the way around.

Few things inspire as much passion in the south as the pigskin. Football has been called a religion here, and for some that might hold more than an once of truth. Rival teams prepare for their opponents with boot camp intensity, while their fans approach the pregame tail-gating festivities with the same careful attention to detail. Don't miss the "Southern Recipe" if you're planning to feast with your friends this weekend. I'm sending you a great dip to get things started.

Here's hoping the rest of your season is a tremendous success, unless of course, you're playing my Rebels...

Hugs,
Shellie
************************************
Volume I Issue IX
Hey y'all, welcome back! Time to take a mid-week break for a little porch talk. Just step over Old Rex there (he's harmless) and have a seat. I've thrown a few soft pillows around in the porch swing and rockers to help you get comfortable.

I want to tell you about the interesting dinner party my husband and I enjoyed this past weekend. The invitation came from a client whose home I've recently helped to renovate. (Sidebar: I run Interiors by Shellie for a living--this is just my passion!) The setting was beautiful Lake Bruin in St. Joseph, Louisiana. Now, the food was delicious, (remind me to tell you about the food), but it was the mix of guests that made the evening memorable.

Months ago the vision for the home's rebirth began to take shape in Doug and Beverly Curtis' hearts. Saturday evening was a christening, the happy homeowners way of saying thanks to the many hands that helped see their dream become a reality. At one time, dozens of people scurried inside and out--hammering, building, painting, scrubbing, sanding, wiring, and measuring. The guest list included them all.

After a few sincere words of appreciation from our hosts and and a prayer of blessing we sat down to enjoy Doug's fabulous prime rib, potatoe casserole, french bread and salad. Black and white, contractor and cleaning lady, electrician and designer; the conversation was as varied as the guest list!

This is the South I want to celebrate! Call it the New South, call it the Old South, it doesn't much matter to me. But please, take note of the people, the food and the hospitality. For this is who we are. We are unique; we are southern.

Hugs,
Shellie

************************************
Volume I Issue X
Hey friends--time for a porch break. Yes, it's been a whole week since our last visit. I can't believe it either. What's happening at your place? Chances are, if you're reading this from the South, a strange phenomenon is about to overtake the men in your home. Maybe it already has...

The symptons will come on with very little warning. One day they'll be talking about football and harvesting their crops and then--wham!

Their eyes will glass over and they'll begin to stockpile ammunition. Closets and dresser drawers will be upended in an effort to dig out everything camo they've ever owned. Of course, whatever they find will be insufficient, forcing them to trek to the nearest hunting store for supplies.

But, wait, there's an upside! Your men will begin to read more--(hunting magazines). They might even help decorate the house--(duck decoys, deer calls and Cabella boxes will be strewn around carefully for that ecletic look).

My tongue is getting sore, so I'll pull it out of my cheek and get on with the emag. But before I go, my husband wants everyone to know there is still time to rent a duck blind on our family farm. You can email Phil for more info, tomtom@bayou.com. Also, don't forget, there are some great hunting and fishing gifts for the outdoorsmen at my online store, http://www.allthingssouthern.com. Check them out today.

It's a wonderful time of year. Enjoy it!

Hugs,
Shellie
************************************
Volume I Issue XI
It's about time y'all got back; I've been standing at the screen door watching for you. Let's sit a spell on the porch and catch up. By the way, thanks to everyone who has been writing in occasionally with ideas and thoughts for the "Southern Exchange"--it makes this a real conversation we have here and not just me jawing each week. I'm worried about some of you folks, though, you don't seem to have much to say...and we know that's not southern. ~smile~

I hope you had a nice weekend; we had a great one! Our oldest child, Jessica , came in for the weekend from LSU. It's always good to see her little black Camry wheel into the carport.

Jessica loves to cook. Her dad and I wanted to take her out Saturday night but she chose to invite her grandparents over and cook supper for us all.

She planned the menu, shopped for the groceries and prepared the meal with careful attention to the details. Watching her that evening, I thought about her strong notion of family, and the delight she seemed to get from serving good food in abundance.

"Yep," I said to myself, "that child is southern--through and through."

I had fun putting the emag together this week. I hope you enjoy it. Remember, I'd love to hear from you. Help me celebrate our southern culture. Whether you have a favorite recipe, a chuckle, or just special memories--write me!tomtom@allthingssouthern.com

Hugs,
Shellie
************************************
Volume I Issue XII
Yea! It's Thursday, and that means Porch Time. Welcome back! One of my subscribers has suggested a name for our little community. How does Coon Creek sound to you? It's growing on me...

Billy Joe McAllister might have jumped off the Talahatchie Bridge a long time before author John Shelton Reed began writing about the South, but they do have one thing in common--double first names.

Some people suggest that double names are popular in the South because our family ties are tighter and there are so many aunts and grandmas, uncles and papaws to name the children after that we're forced to double up. I'll buy that in part, but I'm reminded of something Mark Twain once said,"Southerners talk music." I'm just as prone to believe that the lyrical quality of all those Mary Beths, Leslee Annes, and John Tylers continue to appeal to the Southerner's appreciation of cadence and rhythm.

In addition, I suspect that long ago southern mothers recognized the benefit of the "dire double" when it comes to discipline. My sisters and I knew it was bad when we heard the double name roll call. Years later I succumbed to the same temptation with my own children. When I needed to issue an ultimatum "Jessica" didn't sound half as threatening as "Jessica Ann".

Maybe it would be fun to use double names on our porch--just for a little while at least. I think I'll start us off in my closing tag and when you write in to the Southern Exchange I'll post yours, (with your permission of course).

I hope you enjoy this week's emag. Boudreaux is back in the "Chuckles" feature. I can't help loving that spunky Cajun!

Hugs,
Shellie Charlene

P.S. This Sunday, November the 18th from 3:00 to 5:00 p.m., I'll be signing copies of my memoir, "Lessons Learned on Bull Run Road" at "Turning Pages" Bookstore in Natchez, Mississippi. If any of you are in the area, please come out and visit. I'd love to meet you!

Click here for Publisher's Archive--Page Two




Share this site with a friend:
Your Name:
Your Email:
Your Friend's Email:


Enter a Personal Message From You (Optional)

Home AdvertiseArchivesPoliciesTerms of UseEmail Shellie and All Things SouthernLink to All Things SouthernEternal HelpEmail Promotion and Sales

Copyright 2001 All Things Southern. All Rights Reserved.
Site designed by Bayou Internet and Communications