Lessons from a Delmarva Poultry Princess by Laura Huey Chamberlain
Lisa is used to complying with her mother's expectations, until she meets Reilly, and things get more complicated. Image generated with OpenAI Nineteen years ago my mother - the former Miss Lenore Wilson of Laurel, Delaware - was the 1963 Miss Delmarva Poultry Princess, and this is what she has to say about being a beauty queen. No matter how flawless a woman might appear, Mother says, no matter how beautiful she might be, she's bound to have a run in her stocking, cellulite underneath her girdle, or some such imperfection you can always find if you look hard enough. Nowadays, Mother operates the New You! beauty parlor in the L-shaped attachment Daddy built onto the back of our house. Daddy is a volunteer firefighter and a Blue-Ribbon grower of laying hens, and he taught me the difference between the Virginia and the loblolly pine, both of which grow in the woods behind our chicken houses. But it's Mother's lessons on beauty and the fight against imperfection that ha...