Showing posts with label jan karon. Show all posts
Showing posts with label jan karon. Show all posts

Thursday, September 4, 2014

Why is Jan Karon not coming to Charlotte to read or sign books?

Jan Karon
Here's what I want to know: Why is Jan Karon not coming to Charlotte to promote her new novel, "Somewhere Safe with Somebody Good," her first Mitford novel in years?
After all, Karon lived in Charlotte as a teenager, and for years she was here as an adult, working in advertising.

Just look at her schedule.
Tuesday of this week she was in Birmingham.
Wednesday in Lexington, Ky.
Today, Thursday, Dallas.
Friday, Wichita, Kansas.
Saturday, Decatur, Ga.
Sunday, at least she'll be in the state, at Quail Ridge Books in Raleigh.

What gives? I asked Park Road Books manager Frank Burleson.
"We have no control over where the publicist sends her," he says. "We have a hard time landing major authors sometimes. Sometimes we have great luck. We've had Anne Rice, Pat Conroy. It just depends. Sometimes they will send them out of their normal area trying to increase their readership and sales. They know she's going to sell in North Carolina.
"I wish they had sent her this way," he says. "We could have sold a lot of books."



Saturday, April 12, 2014

Jan Karon: New Mitford Novel Due in September

Jan Karon has big news -- she'll have a new Mitford novel, "Somewhere Safe with Somebody Good,"  out in September -- but our telephone conversation is all over the map. That divine coat she was wearing when I interviewed her in 1996 in Blowing Rock, for instance. Unforgettable. Long, sleek lines. Black. Fit her like a swim suit. She bought it at Binn's in Williamsburg, she told me back then. And she says she's still wearing it.

Jan Karon
Or the cabbage rose wallpaper in her Blowing Rock kitchen, and those  antique girls' dresses -- pristine and white -- that hung on her bedroom wall. I could've moved right into that charming cottage.
But our real subject now is Mitford, and the bestselling Karon's return after a near-decade to the scene of her popular novels, starring, among others, Father Tim Kavanaugh.
"Father Tim has been retired five years, and is at loose ends," she tells me. "I needed to relieve him of this angst that seems to come when men retire. Stop!" I said. "Find something to do."
So the good father "just fell into" a new pulpit.  "But it has nothing to do with the church," she says. "He walks out his faith on Main Street."
And no more Main Street Grill. The new eatery is Wanda's Feel Good Cafe. "Wanda's all about burgers and fries," says Karon. "That's where the guys meet."
You probably know that Karon, who's 77, was born in Lenoir and grew up in Charlotte, and that her grandmother lived for decades at the corner of Park Avenue and Worthington.
Did you also know that Karon, who now lives in Central Virginia, has a secret recipe for weight loss? It's all about cabbage. Let me know if you want the recipe. I'll run it in this space.