Of the many barrier islands that pepper the coast of South
Carolina’s Lowcountry, Pawleys Island, the “arrogantly
shabby” family playground for generations, might be the
most mysterious and charming of them all. It is here and in
the surrounding area that Dorothea Benton Frank has placed
her latest Lowcountry tale, Pawleys Island.
Meet Huey Valentine, the owner of Gallery Valentine,
catering to interior decorators and, heaven save us,
tourists. Huey resides on his family plantation on the
shores of the Waccamaw River, where he cares for his
mother, Miss Olivia, a wise and irresistible octogenarian.
And meet Huey’s great friend Abigail Thurmond, retired
attorney from Columbia, who has laid claim to her family’s
home on Pawleys Island. Huey and Abigail are complacent in
their fat and sassy lives until the stormy advent of the
artist Rebecca Simms.
Rebecca has been catapulted from her home, her marriage,
and her children. She has escaped to Pawleys Island to hide
herself from herself. But after Miss Olivia pries Rebecca’s
secrets from her, Huey and especially Abigail are
challenged to reenter life outside the dream state their
idyllic geography evokes. They will see that Rebecca has
her day in court, but they never expect to provoke a
national forum for discussion.
With characteristic humor and a full cast of eccentric and
wonderfully lovable characters, Dorothea Benton Frank
brings us her most honest and entertaining story to date.
People have secrets they never want anyone to know. People
have pasts they would prefer be left out of conversation.
In Frank’s nimble hands, it all comes spilling out to be
examined and reconciled.