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March 2010

First Day of Spring

March 21st, 2010

Atlanta and New York were my stops this week.  Blissful weather in both places and I met many wonderful people. If you’re in or near Atlanta, the Botanical Garden, where I spoke, is such a serene place to wander.  My cousin is taking classes there in shade gardening and hydrangeas.  Several Dale Chihuly glass sculptures adorn the place, their vegetal glass shapes rivaling the flowers.

In New York, I stayed at the artful Gramercy Park Hotel. Danny Meyer’s newish restaurant there, Il Maialino served up a taste of Italy. The malfatti pasta with roasted pork was so tasty.  My editor had a toast for me at The Italian Wine Merchant, so I had a chance to meet Sergio Esposito (whose book Passion on the Vine I liked), and to have a sip of Italia.  The bottles on the shelves are displayed like art objects and the lighted votives between them give a little flame of religious fervor to selecting a good vino nobile for dinner.   At this gathering I was able to thank some of the committed and talented people who are behind publishing Every Day in Tuscany. At Barnes and Noble, I had brief visits with several old friends, including a childhood friend of my daughter.  One thing I love about the book tour is these surprise meeting.  My visit North ended at a library event in lovely New Canaan, presided over by the excellent Elm Street Books. Someone gave me two loaves of freshly baked bread, which we sampled in the car en route back to the city.

Yesterday, when I flew into Raleigh-Durham, I could see from the plane window the Bradford pears igniting the landscape below with their white abundance.   They have burst into bloom in my absence.   Driving home, I saw clumps of daffodils and a few purple-haze redbuds.  Now I have the afternoon before I fly out tomorrow for Powell’s in Portland, Oregon, then down the California coast, then to U of GA, U of FL, then Miami–two weeks of being a wandering minstrel.  All with carry-on. I must be a clever packer tonight!

Meanwhile, a few hours to remove dead leaves from a flower bed and to fertilize my gardenias.  Still too early to plant, but time to get ready.

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Only Connect, as E. M. Forester said

March 10th, 2010

Here are some lovely links that came to me today.  The internet is just astounding for quick connection.

http://www.goodreads.com/author/show/4826.Frances_Mayes

http://www.cnn.com/2010/TRAVEL/03/10/tuscany.life.book.mayes/index.html

http://www.fodors.com/news/story_3910.html

Tomorrow my tour begins in earnest!  Thanks to all who came to the Regulator in Durham last night.  I had a fine time!  Hope to see you along the way.

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Embarking

March 7th, 2010

My book tour travels begin this week.  Durham NC, Boston, Atlanta, New York, New Canaan, Portland, Marin County CA, Menlo Park CA, La Jolla CA, Newport Beach CA, Napa, University of GA at Athens, University of FL at Gainesville, Miami, Boston again, Toronto, Minneapolis—these are my stops, probably with a few to add.  (See “Tour” on this website for locations and times.)  If you are near, I would love to say hello.

Meanwhile, I’m planting fruit trees, dogwoods and roses.  I bought four seed packets of corn, several lettuces, basil, borage, hollyhocks, various sunflowers, cosmos and baby’s breath.  On breaks from travel, I’ll be visiting nurseries and stuffing my car with bounty for the garden.  My apple trees should arrive this week.  After such a fierce winter, I have an equally fierce desire for my garden to flourish.

Oh, to be two people.  One who goes out into the world and one who stays home and tends a garden.

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Around Our House Excitement Is Building

March 2nd, 2010

A week from today, my new memoir will be published.  Kicking off the tour, I’ll read at the Regulator Bookstore in Durham.  Once a manuscript is finished, it takes many months for the actual book to appear.  The proofing is, for me, the hard part.  Any mistake in the final book is SO painful. Next comes selecting the cover–a pleasure.  Every Day in Tuscany’s cover is by my friend Al Hurley.  He took the photograph from Cortona’s bell tower and when I saw it, I saw immediately that it IS the end of my book–the image was uncanny for me.  Then there are dozens of little edits and queries.

Finally, a day is set, and now that day is near.  9 March. I’m excited about going on tour, meeting many new friends. I dread the flying. I hope I won’t have delays that put me in a hotel at midnight, facing a dinner out of the minibar.  What to read?  Will I get snowed in, like last time? What to say?  Will someone water the seeds I’ve started while I’m gone?  Will someone call out from the audience, “We used to date at U VA”?  Can I keep up my exercise?

Please click on “Tour.” If I am coming near where you live, I would love to meet you.

This is my third memoir about living in Italy.  As the title suggests, it is very much a book about the particulars and pleasures of every day life.  There are no chases, no drug deals, nothing more torrid than the fire in the bread oven.  There is one horrid scrape with an ugly threat–but otherwise, what I am in love with is rural Tuscany: the friends, daily passions, and celebrations of piazza life.  We’ve had so much fun expanding our vegetable garden and restoring another house from the time of Saint Francis of Assisi.  Although we did mind-bending labor on Bramasole, we did not work on the restoration of  the “new” stone-roofed house, merely oversaw every detail for three years–and combed Tuscany for authentic old materials.  Though I will lay a path or paint a room, I hope my drastic restoration days are over! I wrote one long chapter on Luca Signorelli, local boy, and profound renaissance artist.  He and I have become friends, in spite of him being long dead.  That hasn’t seemed to matter.  I propose a Signorelli Trail to follow, like the Piero della Francesca trail so many travellers take. If you don’t share my adoration of him, the places where his work lives are all sublime.  Everywhere in my book there’s food and wine.  I think, 25 recipes–all guaranteed to be terrific. I only wish the aromas could rise off the page!  Some were given to me by favorite Tuscan chefs. You can’t write about Italy without dwelling intensely on the table!  I had an especially good time introducing Italian food to my little grandson.  There’s an ode to friendship–both to our Italian friends and to the American expats who have taken to Italian life so beautifully.  Underlying all the places and events, my question throughout concerns happiness–what is it, how to hold onto it.

In July, we are celebrating twenty years since we bought our house, Bramasole.  We are planning a sparkle-plenty party, with music, great wine and food, and a gathering of friends who have been close over these years. I’m so happy that this new book coincides with this anniversary.  If you read it, I hope that it’s a reminder of life-in-the-moment, wherever you are.  Tuscany is a state of mind; you can have that state of mind anywhere.

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Frances's Links:

The Tuscan Sun

Festival del Sole

Tuscan Sun Festival

Travel Dynamics International

Laneventure

Wildwood Lamps

Drexel Heritage

www.broadwaybooks.com

www.therecipeclub.net

www.crownpublishing.com

Steven Barclay Agency

Curtis Brown


Sites to See:

Tuesday Recipe

Steven Rothfeld

Bob Krist

Images by Al Hurley

2or3things.blogspot.com

Good Bones Great Pieces

Kim Sunee

Chef Robin White

Cannelle et Vanille

Borgo di Vagli

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