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When mama said "You won't melt in the rain because you aren't made of sugar," she was wrong. She never ate one of Mama Harris' Fried Pies. Everyone in the itsy - bitsy town of Josh, Georgia sure is getting fat from all those pies and they aren't slowing down. After decades of perfecting her secret recipe, ninety year-old Mama Harris' pies just keep getting better. They're so good that they have become an army.

Produktbeschreibung
When mama said "You won't melt in the rain because you aren't made of sugar," she was wrong. She never ate one of Mama Harris' Fried Pies. Everyone in the itsy - bitsy town of Josh, Georgia sure is getting fat from all those pies and they aren't slowing down. After decades of perfecting her secret recipe, ninety year-old Mama Harris' pies just keep getting better. They're so good that they have become an army.
Autorenporträt
Richard Mandell is a practicing golf course architect who has worked on more than fifty golf course projects (new and renovations) in his twenty two-year career. He has written numerous articles on golf architecture for magazines such as Golf Illustrated and Links Magazine and has contributed chapters to three books on the subject: Volumes I and II of Golf Architecture (A Worldwide Perspective) and Favourite Holes By Design: The Architect's Choice. Richard's first publishing effort came with his own award-winning book, Pinehurst Home of American Golf (The Evolution of a Legend). He founded T. Eliot Press in 2007 and won the ING Book of The Year Award that same year. The book was a finalist for the United States Golf Association 2007 Book of the Year Award and was a ForeWord Magazine Sports Book Award 2007 Finalist as well. Mama Harris' Fried Pie Army is illustrated by Southern Pines native, Miss Laurel Holden. She is a 2007 graduate of Pinecrest High School and is currently enrolled at the Center for Cartoon Studies in White River Junction, Vermont. A friend of Richard's knew of Laurel's talents because his wife works with Laurel's mother. So Thomas and he met with Laurel and she showed them some of her work. "We simply looked and thought, 'it works for us' not knowing how good her illustrations really were" said Richard. They just didn't realize at the time they were subconsciously comparing her work to legendary children's book illustrations like Curious George and Thomas The Train, etc. Richard shared the story with her as well as a few pictures of Mama Harris and she nailed the essence of Mama Harris right out of the gate.