Beaufort Official Visitors Guide 2011 - (Page 40)

40 to enter a monthly  Visit a chance to win an autographed copy of Pat drawing for www.beaufortsc.org Conroy’s newest book, My Reading Life. While in town, head to local retailers McIntosh Book Shoppe and Beaufort Bookstore to pick up more bestsellers. PHOTO ©DAvID G. SPIELMAN-97  MEET PAT CONROY Q Pat Conroy’s Adopted Home uite simply, Pat Conroy — author of bestselling novels such as South of Broad and The Water is Wide — loves everything about Beaufort and the Lowcountry. He says it was the first place he could really call “home” — and it still is. He and his wife, novelist Cassandra King, own a house in Beaufort. As the son of a Marine Corps pilot (whom he depicts in The Great Santini), Conroy had more than 20 addresses before moving to Beaufort in the 1960s (another move for his father’s job) as he began high school. He says the city embraced him into her history: “She was proud to have me call her my hometown.” Conroy also pays tribute to locals who helped him along the way. While attending Beaufort High, he took a creative writing course taught by novelist Ann Morse (who wrote under the name Ann Head). Conroy says she helped him develop his writing style, and every time he publishes a new book, Conroy takes a rose to her headstone in Beaufort’s St. Helena Cemetery. He also credits his Beaufort High School teacher, Gene Norris, with giving him tours of the town that would go on to form the setting for several of his books. Conroy now provides his own Beaufort tours to visiting friends. He shows them the antebel two-story antebellum manse where Robert Duvall and Blythe Danner lived in The Great Santini; the palm-surrounded historic home where Barbra Streisand stayed while filming The Prince of Tides; and the downtown Beaufort house on Hancock Street where he wrote The Boo, The Water is Wide and the first chapters of The Great Santini. Conroy is always eager to share what he loves about Beaufort with all visitors: What’s your favorite restaurant in the area? Shrimp Shack, always. I also like a place out on St. Helena called The Foolish Frog. A friend of mine from high school opened it. And, I generally head to Wren’s when I’m in town. What are your other favorite places in the area? I love being on Bay Street with those oak trees, and the mansions are just magnificent. I think it’s one of the most beautiful sights in America. I love the sunsets there — and out at my new house. How did you develop such a strong affinity for the area? When we first crossed the bridge over the Whale Branch River, I remember saying to my mother, “My God, it’s pretty.” I’d been complaining about another move, but something just clicked, and I did not know that I was looking at what would become my life’s work. I went crazy for everything. I love the town and the people. The Lowcountry and I would be tied together forever. Tell us about your most recent projects. For My Reading Life, I wanted to write something about my mother, her love of reading and how it affected her children. I became a novelist and my sister Carol became a poet. It’s a love letter to books. And I’m currently working on what’s tentatively called The Death of Santini. http://www.beaufortsc.org

Table of Contents for the Digital Edition of Beaufort Official Visitors Guide 2011

Beaufort Official Visitors Guide 2011
Table of Contents
Welcome
About the Area
Beaufort's Beginning
Historic Attractions Map
Unspoiled Land & Views
Fresh-Food Fix
Arts Scene
Silver Screen Sites
An Ideal "I Do" Destination
A Place to Call Home
A Proud Place
Rest Easy
Business Listings
Accommodations
Dining
Calendar of Events
Here & There

Beaufort Official Visitors Guide 2011

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