Mad Girls in Love - (Girls Raised in the South) by Michael Lee West (Paperback)
About this item
Highlights
- Michael Lee West's indomitable G.R.I.T.S. (Girls Raised in the South) are back -- enduring rough times with all the grace and outrageous flair expected of true Southern heroines.Bitsy Wentworth -- fleeing yet another relationship nightmare in a "borrowed" red Corvette, with her baby daughter and a recently acquired "demon child" -- has an APB out on her for attempted murder (she broke her ex-husband's nose with a frozen slab of ribs that she purchased at the Piggly Wiggly).
- Author(s): Michael Lee West
- 544 Pages
- Fiction + Literature Genres, Romance
- Series Name: Girls Raised in the South
Description
About the Book
From the bestselling author of "Crazy Ladies" comes the story of six unforgettable Southern women who face life with flair and grace and who share their hysterical, unpredictable, always entertaining and sometimes tragic tales, each in her own distinctive voice.Book Synopsis
Michael Lee West's indomitable G.R.I.T.S. (Girls Raised in the South) are back -- enduring rough times with all the grace and outrageous flair expected of true Southern heroines.
Bitsy Wentworth -- fleeing yet another relationship nightmare in a "borrowed" red Corvette, with her baby daughter and a recently acquired "demon child" -- has an APB out on her for attempted murder (she broke her ex-husband's nose with a frozen slab of ribs that she purchased at the Piggly Wiggly). Her mama, Dorothy, is writing letters to First Ladies from inside the Central State Asylum, while Aunt Clancy Jane has completed her inevitable progression from hippie to local Crazy Cat Lady. Three generations of unforgettable Crystal Falls, Tennessee, women -- and the men they attract, enrage, and confound -- are courageously plowing through tumultuous lives of compound disaster . . . and hoping the chaos the next wrong step leads to won't be insurmountable.
Review Quotes
"Michael Lee West writes like the Morman Tabernacle Choir sings--a thousand voices, all different, all together." -- Diana Gabaldon