Today it is my pleasure to Welcome author Karen White to HJ!

Hi Karen and welcome to HJ! We’re so excited to chat with you about your new release, THAT LAST CAROLINA SUMMER!
Please summarize the book for the readers here:
That Last Carolina Summer is a coming home novel centered around the estranged relationship between sisters Phoebe and Addy Manigault and their mother Elizabeth. When Phoebe is struck by lightning at the age of 9, she emerges with the gift of premonition and a haunting nightmare that follows her into adulthood. She flees to the west coast to escape the dreams and her family, only to be called back by Addy when Elizabeth falls ill. As soon as Phoebe is back in the South Carolina Lowcountry, the nightmare returns, except now it allows her to see more details. It opens up a Pandora’s box into a dark family secret, forcing Phoebe to choose between her love for her family and facing the truth.
Please share your favorite line(s) or quote from this book:
“If a hurricane happens during migrations, some birds will take a detour to avoid the storm. Others will use the prevailing tailwinds for a boost. Others will become trapped in the storm, some in the eye of the hurricane, unable to escape. The ones who survive can be blown miles off course and end up in unlikely places where they will need to learn to adapt. We all experience storms in our lives despite our best efforts to take a detour. Landfall can sometimes find us in a new and unexpected place, and sometimes to our surprise, it’s the place we were always meant to be.”
Please share a few Fun facts about this book…
There were many idea sources for That Last Carolina Summer, but the first one was a gift of a “smart” birdfeeder from my husband. It has a camera in it that sends photos of the birds when they stop by to visit. I don’t want to say he created a monster, but he basically did. When my app would notify me of the appearance of a bird, I’d get excited and then I’d want to know more about it. That’s how I acquired a library’s worth of books about birds and I became fascinated at the many ways bird behavior mimics that of humans which inspired the family drama storyline in the book. Fourteen more bird feeders (including two more camera feeders) and a completed novel later, I have no regrets.
What first attracts your Hero to the Heroine and vice versa?
Their first meeting is when Phoebe is 9 and Liam is twelve when Liam saves Phoebe’s life. Their meeting is brief but meaningful, and Phoebe remembers his eyes “the color of the summer marsh” even though she doesn’t learn his name until years later. When they meet again as adults, the connection is instant and powerful and, of course, inevitable.
Did any scene have you blushing, crying or laughing while writing it? And Why?
This book is about complicated relationships, especially between mothers and daughters, and the misunderstandings and hurts we carry from our childhoods. This snippet is between my protagonist, Phoebe, and her mother and it made me cry because it was very much the conversation I wish I’d had with my mother.
“I think you didn’t know how to mother a child like me, and I didn’t know how to be your daughter. We should have stopped trying so hard and just let things work themselves out. But we’re both so hard-headed. I guess I got that from you. It’s not a bad quality, you know. So I guess I should thank you.”
I cleared my throat. “I do love you, Mother. Even though at times I found it hard to show you. But you also sometimes made it hard for me to love you. That never meant I didn’t.”
Readers should read this book….
Readers should read this book because it’s got something for everyone: a little bit of mystery, romance, and family drama—all told against the lush backdrop of the South Carolina Lowcountry. It’s also an emotional roller coaster with lots of dips and dives in the middle but gives you a cathartic soft landing at the end.
What are you currently working on? What other releases do you have in the works?
My next book, THE LADY ON ESPLANADE, will be released on November 4th. This is the third book in my New Orleans-set Royal Street series, the spin-off from my bestselling Tradd Street series.
Thanks for blogging at HJ!
Giveaway: One final copy of THAT LAST CAROLINA SUMMER by Karen White, US only
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Excerpt from THAT LAST CAROLINA SUMMER:
Prologue
Phoebe
2001
Memory is a disloyal friend, an unreliable narrator whose motivations are not always benign. There are some things about that summer I remember with absolute clarity: the scalp-scorching heat; my dog, Bailey, getting hit by a car; getting my ears pierced. Yet other events are charred around the edges, obscuring my view when I peered through the lens of hindsight and with the longing for a life that was never meant to be mine.
That summer seemed to linger longer than most, with stories of cars overheating and people dropping from heatstroke the subject of front porch and grocery store conversations. Dogs didn’t venture past the shady boundaries made from giant magnolias and river birch trees, and the scalded leaves on our azaleas turned brown. Mother and Daddy stopped talking about how hot it was, as if naming it would summon the devil.
I spent most of August out on the water hoping for a reprieve in the form of a good breeze, wishing some temporary, but nonetheless debilitating, disease would befall me while I dreaded the waning days of freedom until the first day of school.
Which is how I found myself squatting at the end of our dock on that scorching hot August afternoon mentally flipping through the list of possible afflictions I’d accumulated while reading the library’s collection of World Book Encyclopedia. My preoccupation with weird diseases would explain why I wasn’t paying as much attention to the weather that afternoon as I should have been. And why I ignored Mother’s often repeated warning to be careful what I wished for.
My bare feet on the dock were impervious to the uneven planks and loose splinters as I checked my crab pots and thought about lunch. I was always thinking about food. Mother had put me on another diet, something none of my nine-year-old peers knew anything about.
Mother was a former Miss South Carolina, with Standards and Rules that my older sister, Adeline, and I forgot to our peril. Not that Addie ever needed a reminder. But I found crabbing and fishing a better use of my time than practicing how to walk in high heels.
I’d been left to my own devices while they went for another fitting for Addie’s Peach Queen pageant dress, leaving me under the loose supervision of my aunt Sassy. As a single woman with no kids of her own, my aunt understood better than most the importance of letting children be children. She was also profoundly deaf which made things easier for a growing girl who loved the wild freedom that existed outside her back door.
A blue heron perched on its long skinny legs at the edge of the water, waiting for an unlucky snack to swim by, its cold yellow eyes pretending not to see me. I wasn’t offended, having grown used to being ignored, and had long since discovered that I thrived under the lack of attention. Otherwise, I’d be at Gwyn’s department store getting squeezed into a satin and tulle nightmare and being forced to suck in my tummy.
The wind blew the bird’s straggly white plume on top of its head, ruffling the feathers on his S-shaped neck. The light blue painted bird feeder I’d made in Bible camp for Aunt Sassy swung in the strong breeze, thunking against the oak tree’s trunk. It was only one of about a dozen feeders filled daily by my bird-loving aunt but now unusually abandoned by the chatter of finches and other songbirds.
I dropped an empty pot back into the water and looked up at a quarreling flock of royal terns with their bright orange beaks and forked tails skimming low over the water instead of their usual hunting position high in the sky. I straightened, for the first time noticing the opaque wall-like cloud with the flat bottom hovering over us like a spaceship.
Birds were better forecasters than the weather people on television, and it was my own fault for not paying attention. According to Aunt Sassy, birds didn’t need mathematical calculations to predict the weather, and they were always right. Which is why I never took offense when Addie called me a birdbrain.
The first growl of thunder made me think of lunch again. I pulled up the second crab pot, frowning at the untouched raw chicken necks I’d used as bait, aware again of the statuesque bird. It twisted its long and slender neck to turn its head in the direction of the disappearing terns. With a great swoop of blue-tinged feathers, the heron lifted into the air and raced inland. I watched it disappear as I became aware of the peculiar hush around me. Behind the rustling grass and moving water the deafening absence of bird sounds roared in my ears.
I turned at the squeak of the back screen door’s hinges. Aunt Sassy stood in the doorway, her face scrunched in worry as she glanced up at the darkening sky. She signaled with urgent hand gestures that I needed to come inside quickly.
I signed to her to let her know I’d understood, realizing she must have felt the rumble of thunder. A jagged bolt of lightning pierced the marsh in the near distance. I began counting the seconds—one Mississippi, two Mississippi, three Mississippi—just like Aunt Sassy had taught me, walking sideways to keep an eye on the sky and the wooden boards at the same time so I wouldn’t slip off.
My toes brushed the edge the dock where it met the prickly Spartina grass of the yard as I struggled with recently learned third-grade math. Count the number of seconds between the lightning flash and the sound of the thunder and then divide by five to get the distance to the lightning.
“One Mississippi . . .”
The humid air crackled and snapped like thousands of ghost crabs, lifting my hair from root to end and shooting a tingling sensation tumbling up my bones. The sky burst open, and I started to run. A powerful punch struck me in the middle of my back, stealing my breath and knocking me onto my stomach.
Everything went dark, and I knew that meant I must be dead. Except I was aware of the spiky grass under my cheek, and the pelting of chilly rain on my bare arms and legs, and the briny smell of the marsh. But the familiar pulse of blood in my ears had disappeared. I was like a bug caught under a china cup. A vague sense of disappointment washed over me as I figured that this must be all there was to know about death, regardless of what Reverend Bostwick told us every Sunday.
A shout, a boy’s voice, came from somewhere. Far away at first and then up close. My elbows smacked the ground as hands flipped me over like a beached dolphin. I tried to open my eyes, but they only fluttered, revealing a rotating screen of solid gray and white.
Then the boy’s voice again, shouting for someone to call 9-1-1. Rain splattered my body but not my face, as if something was blocking me from the deluge. I heard a sound of rustling like fabric against wet wood next to my ear, and what felt like a rock began pounding rhythmically against my chest again and again, my body ignoring all my commands to get up and run.
Cold, wet fingers pinched my nose closed then tilted my head back, my hair tugging my scalp as my ponytail rubbed against the ground. I wanted the boy to stop, to go away, because a gray-and-white world was better than this unprovoked beating.
Then a warm breath was blown into my mouth once. Twice. My eyes flickered open, and a face appeared above me, the angry sky behind it forming an imperfect halo. My gray-and-white vision burst into full color. Startling green eyes the same shade as the marsh in August peered down at me, and I wondered if Reverend Bostwick had been right after all.
The boy sat back, and my eyes focused on the shark’s tooth he wore on a leather cord around his neck. My chest expanded with an involuntary intake of air then shrank again as a piercing pain cut through my consciousness. I gasped for breath, my skin and bones aching as the reassuring beat of my heart again rumbled within my head. An approaching siren melded into the noise of the rain and the wind and the sound of Sassy’s bird feeders crashing into each other as my eyes followed the boy.
“She’s going to be okay,” he said to someone I couldn’t see. His words cracked from exertion or because he was at that age when boys and their voices got stuck between childhood and manhood. I didn’t recognize him, most likely on account of me attending a private girls’ school in Charleston and not being around boys in general.
Soft hands cupped my face. I gazed up at Aunt Sassy, at her mute agony as she knelt beside me, stroking my face again and again like I was Lazarus raised from the dead. The boy stood as the sound of shouting men neared. He turned toward the house, his shirtless arms and torso bronzed by the sun, his wild bleached-blond hair longer than Mother or Daddy would approve of.
Aunt Sassy bowed her head over mine to kiss my forehead, and when she lifted it again, the boy was gone. I only learned his first name much later, but I remembered his eyes and the way the color matched the summer marsh. That day became the line of demarcation where the before of my life intersected with the after, and his appearance in it an unwelcome reminder of all I had lost.
They say that lightning never strikes twice. Which is understandable considering the odds are one in about fifteen thousand of being struck once in a lifetime. They also say that if you survive a lightning strike, you will have no memory of it.
But, as I’ve learned from experience, both are just the lies we tell ourselves. Like the platitudes a mother might use to soothe a scared child, we cling to myths and other assurances so we can sleep at night.
That doesn’t make them the truth.
Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.
Book Info:
Beloved bestselling author Karen White returns with a captivating new Southern drama about sisterhood, secrets and one woman’s reckoning with the past
As a child, Phoebe Manigault developed the gift of premonition after she was struck by lightning in the creek near her Charleston home. Plagued throughout her life by mysterious dreams, and always living in the shadow of her beautiful sister, Addie, Phoebe eventually moves to the West Coast, as far from her family as possible. Now, years later, she is summoned back to South Carolina, to help Addie care for their ailing mother.
As Phoebe’s return lures her back into deep-rooted tensions and conflicts, she is drawn to Celeste, whose granddaughter went missing years ago. Their connection brings comfort to Phoebe, while Celeste’s adult grandson Liam resurrects complicated emotions tied to Phoebe’s past.
But the longer Phoebe spends in her childhood home, the more her recurring nightmares intensify—bringing her closer to the shocking truth that will irrevocably change everything. Unfolding against the lush backdrop of the South Carolina Lowcountry, That Last Carolina Summer is an unforgettable story about the unbreakable bonds of family and the gift of second chances.
Book Links: Amazon |
Meet the Author:
Karen White is a New York Times and USA TODAY bestselling author with millions of copies of her books in print in fifteen different languages. When not writing, Karen spends her time reading and bird-watching. She and her husband have two grown children and a spoiled Havanese dog, Sophie, and she divides her time between Atlanta, Georgia, and the northwest Florida coast.
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dholcomb1
Loved the excerpt!
Diana Hardt
I liked the excerpt. It sounds like a really interesting book.
Nancy Jones
I enjoyed the excerpt.
Debby
I enjoyed the excerpt. thanks so much!
hartfiction
I love how they meet as children!!
janinecatmom
Looks like my kind of book.
Lori R
The book sounds intriguing.
Glenda M
It sounds very interesting!
Daniel M
looks like a fun one.
Amy R
Sounds good
Dianne Casey
Love reading about the Lowcountry of SC and Karen White’s books. Can’t wait to read.
Mary C
Looking forward to reading more.
DIANE SALLANS
I’ve spent many vacations along the Carolinas coast, so that setting always catches my eye.
cherierj
Sounds like an intriguing story with the ability of the gift of premonition.
Bonnie
What an interesting book for summer reading! Great excerpt. I’d love to read more.
Patricia B
It sounds like it explores important family dynamics many of us have had to deal with. As the oldest of 6 siblings, it got very complicated.
Shannon Capelle
Cant wait to read the whole book
bn100
interesting
erahime
A momentous meeting between characters that will bring them back together in the future.