Discussion
Guide
More Sweet Tea
1. In Hair Today, Gone Tomorrow, we peek inside the
world of two Southern institutions: funerals and hair dressers.
Why is it that those subjects naturally lend themselves to humor and,
occasionally, profound comparisons?
2. In The Healing Touch, homemade medicines--and
humor--prove strangely effective for what ails people. Do you
recall instances of old Southern remedies working wonders against all
odds?
3. In The Hope Quilt, Southerners celebrate two of
their favorite heirlooms--handmade quilts and grandma's old-fashioned
biscuits. What is it about these two seemingly ordinary comforts
that makes them so enduring in our memories?
4. In A Family Treasure, what we find at the end of
the rainbow is far less wonderful than the search, itself, and the
people who join us on the journey. Can you think of times when a
family trip, event, or mission was memorable not for how it ended but
for how much fun it was along the way?
5. In Barbie's Elopement, a pink pig becomes part
of a small town wedding tradition. Southerners love ritual and
tradition. Why do you think that's so important to us?
6. In Drag racer Arrested on Horseback, a Southern
girl recalls her days as a barrel-racing cowgirl on the rodeo circuit.
Do you have memories of reckless teenage hobbies that "country girls"
took for granted?
7. In Mommy Darlin', the cult of Southern womanhood comes
under close examination. Some of us are just not cut out for
maternal perfection. Have you ever felt like "a Scarlett
surrounded by a sea of Melanies?"
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