The Wisdom of Hair
Author: Kim Boykin
Purchase on Amazon and Barnes and Noble.
Synopsis: Life can be beautiful, but it takes a little work...
“The problem with cutting your own hair is that once you start, you just keep cutting, trying to fix it, and the truth is, some things can never be fixed. The day of my daddy’s funeral, I cut my bangs until they were the length of those little paintbrushes that come with dime-store watercolor sets. I was nine years old. People asked me why I did it, but I was too young then to know I was changing my hair because I wanted to change my life.”In 1983, on her nineteenth birthday, Zora Adams finally says goodbye to her alcoholic mother and their tiny town in the mountains of South Carolina. Living with a woman who dresses like Judy Garland and brings home a different man each night is not a pretty existence, and Zora is ready for life to be beautiful.
With the help of a beloved teacher, she moves to a coastal town and enrolls in the Davenport School of Beauty. Under the tutelage of Mrs. Cathcart, she learns the art of fixing hair, and becomes fast friends with the lively Sara Jane Farquhar, a natural hair stylist. She also falls hard for handsome young widower Winston Sawyer, who is drowning his grief in bourbon. She couldn’t save Mama, but maybe she can save him.
As Zora practices finger waves, updos, and spit curls, she also comes to learn that few things are permanent in this life—except real love, lasting friendship, and, ultimately… forgiveness.
About the Author: I was born in Augusta, Georgia, but raised in South Carolina in a home with two girly sisters and great parents. So when you read my stuff if there is ever some deranged mama or daddy terrorizing the protagonist, I want to make it clear, it’s not them.
I had a happy, boring childhood, which sucks if you’re a
writer because you have to create your own crazy. PLUS after you’re published
and you’re being interviewed, for some reason, it’s very appealing that the
author actually lived in Crazy Town or somewhere in the general vicinity.
What I did have going for me was two things. One, my
grandfather, Bryan Standridge, was an amazing storyteller. He held court under
an old mimosa tree on the side of his yard, and people used to come by in
droves just to hear him tell stories. He told tales about growing up in rural
Georgia and shared his unique take on the world. As a child, I was enthralled,
but when I started to write, really write, I realized what a master teacher of
pacing and sensory detail he was.
The other major influence on my writing is my ADHDness. Of
course when I was a kid, nobody knew what that was. Compared to my older
sisters, I knew something was “wrong” with me, so I learned to multitask like
crazy and excel at things I did well to make up for things I couldn’t do like
math and sitting still.
Today, I’m an empty nester of two kids with a husband,
three dogs, and 126 rose bushes. I write stories about strong southern women
because that’s what I know. I’m an accomplished public speaker, which basically
means I’m good at talking.
If this doesn’t tell you what you want to know, check out
my blog for a few laughs and some good stuff on writing, gardening, food, and,
of course, hair.
1 Winner will receive the Kindle pictured above. (WiFi, 6in Display)
4 Winners will get 2 ARCS each, on for them self and one for their hair stylist!
4 Winners will get 2 ARCS each, on for them self and one for their hair stylist!
Shipping in the US only, no PO Boxes. Must be 13+ to Enter
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