Patti Frye Meredith

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Patti Frye Meredith

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Lee Smith, Jill McCorkle, Darnell Arnoult

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July 2012

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Patti Meredith grew up in Galax, Virginia. Most of her stories are set in the Blue Ridge Mountains, but her debut novel, South of Heaven, takes place in the North Carolina Sandhills where her family’s roots run deep.

“The Carthage in South of Heaven is a place formed from the hazy childhood memories I have of visiting my grandmothers. If you know the real Carthage, I apologize for misplaced landmarks and fictitious churches!”

After graduating from Virginia Tech with a degree in horticulture, she was fortunate to cultivate a career in television production and worked for many years at UNC-TV on the long running program, North Carolina People with William Friday.

“Mr. Friday loved talking with writers, and listening to his conversations with Le
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Average rating: 4.46 · 82 ratings · 18 reviews · 1 distinct workSimilar authors
South of Heaven

4.46 avg rating — 82 ratings — published 2013 — 3 editions
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I love this book. So much wisdom. A book I'll go back to again and again. Now I need to figure out how to write Virginia Evans a letter!!!

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More of Patti's books…
Flannery O'Connor
“The woods are full of regional writers, and it is the great horror of every serious Southern writer that he will become one of them.”
Flannery O'Connor, Mystery and Manners: Occasional Prose

Wilton Barnhardt
“Southerners. Such literate, civilized folk, such charm and cleverness and passion for living, such genuine interest in people, all people, high and low, white and black, and yet how often it had come to, came to, was still coming to vicious incomprehension, usually over race but other things too - religion, class, money. How often the lowest elements had burst out of the shadows and hollers, guns and torches blazing, galloping past the educated and tolerant as nightriders, how often the despicable had run riot over the better Christian ideals... how often cities had burned, people had been strung up in trees, atrocities had been permitted to occur and then, in the seeking of justice for those outrages, how slippery justice had proven, how delayed its triumph. Oh you expect such easily obtained violence in the Balkans or among Asian or African tribal peoples centuries-deep in blood feuds, but how was there such brutality and wickedness in this place of church and good intention, a place of immense friendliness and charity and fondness for the rituals of family and socializing, amid the nation's best cooking and best music... how could one place contain the other place?”
Wilton Barnhardt, Lookaway, Lookaway

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