The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

New book is the perfect Southern stocking stuffer

- Your daily roundup of celeb news and chatter By Jennifer Brett jbrett@ajc.com

Leslie Anne Tarabella didn’t set out to be a newspaper columnist, much less an author. Her calling found her, instead of the other way around.

The former kindergart­en teacher and busy mom of two sons started a blog a few years ago, where she wrote about life in Alabama in a uniquely Southern way.

“I love gas station food” is the title of one entry. Another details the time her high school marching band let a pig loose on its rival’s field to protest not being able to perform at halftime. She once wrote about how she prays the Lord will send upstanding young women to be her daughters-inlaw one day. But please heavenly Father, let them not be University of Florida grads, “because we just can’t have that kind of ruckus in the family.”

Her spirited blog led to an invitation to write a weekly newspaper column, and she’s now syndicated in papers throughout the state.

“I never, ever wanted to write,” she said during a recent book signing event at the Marietta home of her friends Rachel and Douglas Frey. “If someone had said, ‘Do you want to write a newspaper column every week?’ I would have said, ‘Are you crazy?’ That’s hard work! It’s like having a term paper due all the time!”

A collection of her favorite columns make up her new book, “The Majorettes Are Back in Town and Other Things to Love About the South.” Just out via River Road Press, it’s available locally at the FoxTale Book Shoppe in Woodstock or the Book Exchange in east Cobb County, or via Amazon.

“It seems like I fell into it but I did not,” Tarabella said. “I really feel like it was God’s plan for me. God gives us gifts that we don’t even know that we want. (Scripture) says that he will give you the delights of your heart. Sometimes he knows what will delight our hearts better than we know. He knew that writing would give me the biggest thrill ever.”

Her quick and breezy pieces are a hoot to read and a welcome respite from much of what appears in newspapers these days. There is no dissection of political scandals, although Alabama has offered plenty of fodder in that arena lately. The closest she comes to talking politics is the anecdote about her mother submitting a recipe for Watergate Cake, a featured delicacy created in the famous Washington hotel’s restaurant, for the church cookbook. The dessert committee changed the name to Pistachio Pudding Cake so as not to raise the specter of Nixon-era unpleasant­ness.

Tarabella does reveal some shocking secrets in between chroniclin­g her chatty trips to the Piggly Wiggly. She does not like sweet tea — “it’s just too dang sweet!” — and although she planned her wedding around the college football season, she took up with someone from Up North. Her “darling Yankee husband” is what she calls her husband, Robert Tarabella.

A Florala, Ala., native

who now lives with her family in Fairhope, she and Robert lived in Marietta for a time years ago.

“We have missed Marietta so much,” Tarabella said. “Both of our boys were born here. We loved it here, it was just a little crowded. I just wanted to get back closer to my parents.”

Tarabella’s parents raised a true belle. She writes with unwavering approval about the time a friend broke up with a boy who wore seersucker to Homecoming. In October. Barbecue is a noun, not a verb. She begs brides to please rethink strapless dresses and wields her sharpest epithets, “Mercy daisy and bless their hearts,” at audience members who chew gum or otherwise act up.

She credits author Jan Karon, who appeared at a fundraiser that Tarabella emceed, with helping her find the confidence to pursue the dream she hadn’t known she had.

“What do you want to do with your life?” Karon asked her.

“Well, I write for a little newspaper now and it’s so much fun,” Tarabella answered.

Karon, who segued from a corporate career into her best-selling Mitford series by way of a newspaper column, implored Tarabella to think bigger.

“She looked at me and in her little, tiny Southern voice said, ‘You go before the throne and you ask for it. You go for it!’” she recalled. “I know she was talking about asking God for it, but I also took that to mean that you need to be bold. If you want something in life, you need to go for it.”

 ?? JENNIFER BRETT / JBRETT@AJC.COM ?? Leslie Anne Tarabella signed copies of her new book at a recent event in Marietta.
JENNIFER BRETT / JBRETT@AJC.COM Leslie Anne Tarabella signed copies of her new book at a recent event in Marietta.
 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D BY RIVER ROAD PRESS ?? Tarabella writes with humor and heart in “The Majorettes Are Back in Town.”
CONTRIBUTE­D BY RIVER ROAD PRESS Tarabella writes with humor and heart in “The Majorettes Are Back in Town.”
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