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Celia
Rivenbark was born and raised in Celia
grew up in a small house in the country with a red barn out back that
was populated by a couple of dozen lanky and unvaccinated cats. Her
grandparents' house, just across the ditch, had the first indoor
plumbing in Despite
this proud plumbing tradition, Celia grew up without a washer and dryer.
On every Sunday afternoon of her childhood, while her mama rested up
from preparing a fried chicken and sweet potato casserole lunch, she,
her sister and her daddy rode to the laundromat two miles away to do the
weekly wash. It was
at this laundromat, where a carefully lettered sign reminded customers
that management was "NOT RESONSIBLE" for lost items, that
Celia shirked "resonsibility" her own self and snuck away to
read the big, fat Sunday News & Observer out of Late
nights, she'd listen to the feed trucks rattle by on the highway and
she'd go to sleep wondering what exotic cities those noisy trucks would
be in by morning (Richmond? After
a couple of years of college, Celia went to work for her hometown paper,
the Wallace, NC Enterprise. The locals loved to say, as they
renewed their "perscriptions," that "you can eat a pot of
rice and read the Enterprise and go to bed with nothing on your stomach and nothing on your
mind." Mebbe. But Celia loved the Enterprise. Where else could you cover a dead body being hauled out of the river (alcohol was once again a contributing factor) in the morning and then write up weddings in the afternoon? After
eight years, however, taking front-page photos of the publisher shaking
hands with other fez-wearing Shriners and tomatoes shaped like male
"ginny-talia" was losing its appeal. Celia went to work for the Wilmington, NC Morning Star after a savvy features editor was charmed by a lead paragraph in an Enterprise story about the rare birth of a mule: "Her mother was a nag and her father was a jackass." The Morning
Star was no News and Observer but it came out every day and
Celia got to write weddings for 55,000 readers instead of 3,500, plus
she got a paycheck every two weeks with that nifty New York Times logo
on it. After
an unfortunate stint as a copy editor--her ass expanded to a good six ax
handles across--Celia started writing a weekly humor column that
fulfilled her lifelong dream of being paid to be a smart ass. Along the
way, she won a bunch of press awards, including a national health
journalism award--hilarious when you consider she's never met a steamed
vegetable she could keep down. Having
met and married a cute guy in sports, Celia found herself happily
knocked up at age 40 and, after 21 years, she quit newspapering to stay
home with her new baby girl. After a
year or so, she started using Sophie's two-hour naps to write a humor
column from the mommie front lines for the Sun News in In
2000, Coastal Carolina Press published a collection of Celia's columns.
A Southeast Book Sellers Association best-seller, Bless Your
Heart, Tramp was nominated for the James Thurber Prize in 2001.
David Sedaris won. He wins everything. Her second book, We're Just Like You, Only Prettier, published by St. Martin's Press, was the winner of the Southern Independent Booksellers Alliance Nonfiction Book of the Year and was a finalist for the James Thurber Prize for American Humor. Jon Stewart won. He and David Sedaris probably went out drinking afterwards. I'm sorry, did that sound bitter? Celia
lives in She reports that the proudest day of her life was the one in which the Sears truck showed up to deliver a matching washer and dryer and neither one of 'em had to go on the front porch. |
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