"Folly Beach": A Lowcountry Tale

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“Folly Beach”: A Lowcountry Tale (NAPSA)—Whenthe heroine of Dorothea Benton Frank’s newest book returns to her home in Car- EE aa ec OO olina’s Lowcountry, she learns that the pull of family is as power- ful as the ocean tides and love can strike faster than lightning in summer. With its sandy beaches and bohe- mian charms,surfers ‘and suits alike con_ sider Folly Beach to _ be one of South Carolina’s most historic —___—— and romantic spots. In “Folly Beach” (William Morrow/HarperCollins), it is also the land of heroine Cate Cooper’s childhood, the place where all the ghosts of her past roam freely. Cate never thought she’d wind up in a tiny cottage named the Porgy House on this lovely strip of coast. But circumstances have changed, thanks to her newly dead husband whosefinancial—and emotional—mendacity has left Cate homeless, broke and unmoored. Yet Folly Beach holds more than just personal memories for Cate. There, she learns the story of Dorothy Heyward, artist, writer and colleague of composer George Gershwin. Heyward enjoyed the greatest moments of her life at Folly with her beloved husband, DuBose, author of “Porgy” and “Mamba’s Daughters.” Frank was inspired to write “Folly Beach” after reading the papers of Dorothy and DuBose Heyward, whose life seemed to often intersect with her own. “T ran across a birth certificate on which her nameis ‘Dorothea’— my name—and letterhead that states she lived on Fifth and 12th in Manhattan—my old address— and that she was a memberof the Z Folly Beach “Folly Beach” is a book about more than mango sunsets and gentle ocean breezes. It tells a greatlove story. Cosmopolitan Club and so am J,” said Frank. “I began to wonderif Dorothea/Dorothy wasn’t trying to tell me something and if so, what wasshetrying to say?” Frank reasoned that there was a story to tell. She decided to write one in which she could tell the world about the love between Dorothy and DuBose Heyward. “Theirs may be the most powerful love story of the Charleston Literary Renaissance,” she said. The result is a book that readers describe asfilled with the kind of irresistible charm, saucy wit and lush atmosphere that win Frank the devotion of fans and propel her books to best-sellerdom.It’s a tale of loss, acceptance, family and love. To read an excerpt, go to www.DotFrank.com. To stay up to date with Frank, find her on Facebook.