| manner, but we do believe in making the most of our holidays. So in between the main events in this book, you will find other celebrations that take place only in the South. Although we open with New Year's, our calendar of holidays actually goes in a circle, not a straight line. New Year's, after all, is but a rowdy stopover between Christmas and Twelfth Night. After a quick bow to St. Valentine, we're ready to take leave of our senses and indulge in a true gale-force pre-Lenten Mardi Gras. Then, without dropping a stitch, every- one puts on green for St. Pat's Day and tries to eat his weight in corned beef and cabbage. That's by way of clearing the palate before the feast days of Easter and Passover set in. Springtime in the South brings the garden pilgrimages that act as magnets to our friends from the North. And Spring is a giddy time for the natives as well. May Day, like St. Valentine's and Halloween, is party time for children, and for that reason we have included outings geared to youngsters, with fun foods that are familiar enough to be trusted while looking different enough to pique their interest. On the first Saturday in May, Louisville revels in its unique claim to fame: The Kentucky Derby, most famous horse race in the world. Lavish is the word for parties given by horse people, always has been. No Southern celebration is more meaningful or more jublilant thanIndependence Day...the Fourth of July. Bands playing, flags flying, it isfeast time again. But mostly outdoors, with barbecue grills working fulltilt, parks filling wall-to-wall with picnickers, and ice cream freezerscranking out everybody's favorite flavor by the gallon. Come with us to Thanksgiving dinners on both the eastern and west-ern edges of the South. And fall to~ bib and tucker, when Christmas iscelebrated in many of its regional manifestations. You're invited. And, ifyou like knowing what has gone before, there is history woven into thefabric of our Southern celebrations. |
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