LOCAL
AUTHOR
Southern notions
"Life Is Short,
but It's Wide," by Ann Ipock (Carolina Avenue Press, $14.95)
"My career as a
dental hygienist ended abruptly the day I got the mayor's mustache
caught in my tooth polisher," Ann Ipock writes in the forward
of her second book, "Life Is Short, but It's Wide."
That incident is enough
to keep a lot of folks reading, and the complete story, so to speak,
is in Chapter 5, "Fighting Technology and Other Culprits."
Another chapter is titled, "You Talk Funny, Guess You're Not
Southern."
The Pawleys Island resident
writes about growing up in North Carolina, her grandmother, "Granny
Pinky," and the everyday adventures (she calls them oddities)
she experiences with her husband, Russell, a church administrator,
their two daughters and others.
The stories have appeared
as columns in the Georgetown Times, Pee Dee Magazine and Sasee,
a bimonthly women's publication.
They are pleasant, gentle
stories. They have an Erma Bombeck flavor, but without that Bombeck
edge.
By D.G. Schumacher,
The Sun News