And Finally Elizabeth
Joy in the Savannah Morning
by
Book Details
About the Book
For as long as she could remember they had called her Betsy. And then one day in the rolling hills of
Max, the brindle English Bulldog was her only companion on the journey.
A business woman, who was prominent in the community, she has had it all: education, the big house, the successful husband, the vacations and all that accompanies apparent success. Beneath the enviable surface of her life was her secret reality: more tears than laughter, more fear than joy. She was a woman enormously capable of putting on a happy face.
The book is, at times, painful to read, intensely honest and brightened by dark humor. It’s also about writing and the role of writing as a catalyst for change. It is one woman’s brave odyssey inside herself. And what seems to be an ending becomes a beginning.
About the Author
Elisabeth Fanci Hill is the pen name for the author who resides in Savannah, Georgia.
She is a freelance writer, photographer and business woman, active in the quirky society which characterizes Savannah – a unique city in the Deep South. She is the mother of three girls,and has remarried “for the last time” adding two new children to her family.
She and her husband are proud grandparents of one girl and one boy.
On April 29, 2009, after a four month battle with leukemia, Elizabeth Patterson died. She was very proud of finally publishing this book. She said it took six months to write and seven years to edit. At her memorial service, I read the following excerpt from "And Finally Elizabeth":
Betsy's mind shifted from what she was leaving to where she was going. And she could feel the tug of Savannah. It is the most beautiful place she had ever been. It called to her. The Spanish moss dripping from the live oaks. Historic homes, parks and squares filled with monuments. Church spries towering over all and tolling their bells on the hour. On sundays they played hymns. Full of secret gardens and brick lanes. It is a small city where she will spend the rest of her life - one of inticate wrought iron detail and an enigmatic spirit - a quirkiness she found comforting and endearing. Graced by a breeze from the sea. She would finally be near the ocean. And in the sun and the shade. The soft smells of Crepe Myrtle, Honeysuckle and Wysteria. . . . She was going home.
Elizabeth did spend the rest of her life in Savannah. We just had no idea how short that would be.