Bug Swamp Palavering

by Billie H. Wilson


Formats

Softcover
$19.95
Softcover
$19.95

Book Details

Language : English
Publication Date : 3/29/2016

Format : Softcover
Dimensions : 6x9
Page Count : 270
ISBN : 9781512725254

About the Book

When company came, Grandma Nettie grabbed her sand-filled snuff spit-can and another for her visitor. “Come.” She’d head for the porch. “Let’s us set here and palaver.” Paralleling Grandma Nettie, throughout Billie’s life she palavered. A giddy thirteen-year-old ninth-grader, traipsing on through high school, college, on dates, Billie shared too much with whoever listened. At twenty she graduated from Winthrop and then wed a gorgeous guy about whom Grandma said, “Girl, I’d rather you marry that brown boy than anybody else.” God blessed Billie with children. Suddenly, who were those aging adults calling her “Mama”? Whoa. Who was that “seventyish” lady peeking at Billie from her looking glass? Life caught up with this palaverer.

Billie has experienced sickness, death of loved ones, every sensation her universe has to offer, and each day, palavering to God, she thanks Him for His blessings. This graphic memoir of an imperfect palaverer, aging from thirteen to seventy, allows all voyeurs a field day of reading.


About the Author

Billie H. Wilson popped into the parlor of a Bug Swamp, South Carolina, farmhouse during the Great Depression, soon followed by World War II. Billie’s Grandma Nettie descended from ancestry established before “the new world” became our country, and her head was packed with stories galore. Fascinated by a dear voice spouting fun tales about family, bears, birds, and sometimes gators, in a vernacular passed down through generations, Billie’s subconscious dictated, “Share these tales with the future!” A degree in English from Winthrop College led to teaching, followed by twenty-five years of study with fellow writers in UGA’s Athens, Georgia. This association led to publications in local and regional, magazines and anthologies. Prior to Billie’s first memoir, Bug Swamp’s Gold, she penned a nostalgia column for her hometown newspaper’s popular alternative magazine, Independent Senior.