Omnivorous Reader

OMNIVOROUS READER

Endless Fascination

The troubled life of F. Scott Fitzgerald

By Stephen E. Smith

In his 1971 memoir Upstate, literary critic Edmond Wilson grouses about college kids knocking at the door of his “Old Stone House” in Talcottville, New York. “They want to know about Scott Fitzgerald and that’s all,” he writes. Wilson was Fitzgerald’s classmate at Princeton University, and he edited Fitzgerald’s The Crack-Up and the unfinished novel, The Last Tycoon.

If you’re a reader of literary biographies, you can understand Wilson’s peevishness. Bookstore and library shelves are lined with Scott and Zelda Fitzgerald bios. Matthew Bruccoli’s Some Sort of Epic Grandeur is the definitive work. Still, there are many other bios — at least 30 — that are worth considering: Scott Donaldson’s Fool For Love, Arthur Krystal’s Some Unfinished Chaos, Niklas Salmose and David Rennie’s F. Scott Fitzgerald: A Composite Biography, among others.

Robert Garnett’s recent Taking Things Hard: The Trials of F. Scott Fitzgerald contributes significantly to the material available on the Jazz Age author and will be of particular interest to Fitzgerald aficionados with a North Carolina connection.

Garnett, a professor emeritus of English at Gettysburg College, is best known for his biography, Charles Dickens in Love. His Fitzgerald study is less inclusive than his work on Dickens, covering the final 20 years of Fitzgerald’s life, but his research is meticulous and reveals aspects of Fitzgerald’s personality that other biographers have ignored or overlooked.

During his most prolific years — 1924-1935 — Fitzgerald’s primary source of income was his short fiction (he published 65 stories in The Saturday Evening Post alone), and he was paid between $1500-$5,000 per story when a Depression-era income for a high-wage earner was $1,000 a year. Garnett focuses on the better-known stories — “The Ice Palace,” “A Diamond as Big as the Ritz,” “The Intimate Strangers,” “Babylon Revisited,” “One Trip Abroad,” etc. — to explicate the romantic themes and ineffable mysteries that defined Fitzgerald’s checkered life.

The story “Last of the Belles,” written in 1927, exemplifies Fitzgerald’s return to the familiar theme of romantic infatuation and lost love. The story closely parallels Fitzgerald’s time in Montgomery, Alabama, where he served as a young lieutenant during World War I. He incorporates his courtship of his future wife, Zelda Sayre, into the narrative and transforms her into the character of Ailie Calhoun, “the top girl” in town. The narrator, identified only as Andy, is smitten by Ailie, but she becomes enamored of Earl Schoen, a former streetcar conductor disguised in an officer’s uniform.

“The Last of the Belles” plays off Fitzgerald’s strong sense of class, his longing to recapture youthful romance, and his grieving “for that vanished world and vanished mood, Montgomery in 1918 . . . a living poetry of youth, warmth, charming girls, and romance.” “The Last of the Belles” is Fitzgerald’s final attempt to recapture the South of his youth and its alluring women.

A close reading of the stories opens a window into Fitzgerald’s thematic preoccupations, allowing the readers to glimpse aspects of his thinking that are not readily apparent in his less spontaneous, more ambitious novels. But it also presents the reader with a challenge. Garnett provides a synopsis of the stories he cites, but to fully comprehend his explications, it is necessary to read the stories in their entirety, an undertaking that casual readers might find laborious.

Fitzgerald’s North Carolina sojourn is at the heart of Taking Things Hard. In the Fitzgerald papers at Princeton’s Firestone Library, a personal journal kept by Laura Guthrie, a palm reader at Asheville’s Grove Park Inn, draws an intimate, none-too-flattering portrait of Fitzgerald during his saddest period. “The 150-page single-spaced typescript follows him closely, day by day, often hour by hour,” Garnett writes. “Most Fitzgerald scholars are aware of it; few have read it through, fewer still have mined it.” Garnett believes Guthrie’s journal “is the most valuable single source for any period of his (Fitzgerald’s) life.”

In the early spring of 1935, Fitzgerald fled Baltimore for Asheville. He rented adjoining rooms at The Grove Park Inn, where he wrote a series of historical stories for Redbook. Garnett describes these stories as “wooden, simplistic, puerile, awash in cliché and banality, with ninth-century colloquial rendered in a hodgepodge of cowboy-movie, hillbilly, and detective novel.” These amateurish stories were the low point of Fitzgerald’s writing career.

Guthrie became Fitzgerald’s confidant, constant companion and caregiver. He and Guthrie were not physically intimate, but she was enamored. Of their first dinner together, she wrote, “He drank his ale and loved me with his eyes, and then with his lips for he said, ‘I love you Laura,’ and insisted, ‘I do love you, Laura, and I have only said that to three women in my life.’”

The story Guthrie tells is anything but inspirational. Fitzgerald was intoxicated most of the time — she recorded that he drank as many as 37 bottles of beer a day — and he insisted that she remain at his beck and call. “He is extremely dictatorial,” she wrote, “and expects to be obeyed at once — and well.” As the summer progressed, his drinking grew worse, and he eventually turned to gin “with the idea,” Guthrie noted, “that he had to finish the story and that he could not do it on beer, even if he took 30 or so cans a day, and so he would have to have strong help — first whiskey and then gin.”

In June, Fitzgerald headed to Baltimore and detrained briefly in Southern Pines to visit with James and Katharine Boyd. His conduct while visiting with the Boyds was such that he felt compelled to write a letter of apology when he arrived in Baltimore.

In late 1935, Fitzgerald took a room in Hendersonville, North Carolina, and wrote his self-deprecatingly “Crack-Up” articles. Published in Esquire in 1936, these revealing essays marked the end of his career as a popular novelist and short story writer. He would eventually move to Hollywood, spending the remainder of his days toiling for the dream factories and outlining a novel he would never complete. He died there in relative obscurity in 1940 at the age of 44.

A century after its publication, The Great Gatsby remains a mainstay of the American literary canon, and critics and scholars continue re-evaluating Fitzgerald’s life. No matter how many times they retell the story, it will never have a happy ending.

Tea Leaf Astrologer

TEA LEAF ASTROLOGER

Capricorn

(December 22 – January 19)

Write down these words and revisit them often: Just because you can, doesn’t mean you should. We all know you’re capable of scaling treacherous heights. But at what cost? Your life force is precious. When Venus enters your sign toward the end of the month, things look seriously dreamy in the romance department (rock-steady commitment paired with the warm-and-fuzzies). Here’s the catch: You’re going to have to wreck your own heart wall.

Tea Leaf “Fortunes” for the rest of you:

Aquarius (January 20 – February 18)

Dare you to read just for pleasure.

Pisces (February 19 – March 20)

Try googling power pose.

Aries (March 21 – April 19) 

Don’t forget: A seed can lay dormant for years.

Taurus (April 20 – May 20)

Refine your spice cabinet.

Gemini (May 21 – June 20)

The system needs a reboot.

Cancer (June 21 – July 22)

Delete the app.

Leo (July 23 – August 22)

The last sip is the sweetest.

Virgo (August 23 – September 22)

It’s time to dust off the old you-know-what.

Libra (September 23 – October 22)

Conditions are ripe for cuddling.

Scorpio (October 23 – November 21)

Release what wants to go.

Sagittarius (November 22 – December 21)

Consider swapping out that lamp.

PinePitch

PINEPITCH

PinePitch

Zee Zee at the Top

The 2025 Classical Concert Series sponsored by the Arts Council of Moore County hosts the electrifying pianist Zee Zee at the Sunrise Theater, 250 N.W. Broad St., Southern Pines, at 7:30 p.m. on Monday, Jan. 20. An imaginative and electrifying performer, at the age of 5, after beginning her musical training in Berlin, Germany, Zee Zee quickly became one of the most sought-after young artists of her generation. For additional information go to www.sunrisetheater.com or www.mooreart.org.

Happy Birthday to The King

You can get your wiggle on celebrating Elvis’ 90th all day long — we’re talking all day long — on Wednesday, Jan. 8, at the Bradshaw Performing Arts Center, 3395 Airport Road, Pinehurst. From 9 a.m. to 12 p.m. there will be an examination of Elvis’ roots in gospel music. Then, at 3 p.m., watch an expanded version of his comeback 1968 TV special, “Elvis: One Night with You.” Finally, beginning at 7 p.m., Vivian R. Jacobson will discuss the connection between Elvis and Marc Chagall, and their shared passion for life and art. All programs are in the Owens Auditorium. For information and tickets go to www.ticketmesandhills.com.

Four Part Harmony

The North Carolina Harmony Brigade, an elite group of barbershop singers, comes together one weekend a year for the annual Harmony Extravaganza, from 7 – 9 p.m. on Saturday, Jan. 18, in BPAC’s Owens Auditorium, 3395 Airport Road, Pinehurst. Singers come from all over the United States, Canada and Europe to perform songs like “I Can’t Give You Anything But Love,” “Moonlight Becomes You,” “Make ’Em Laugh,” and more. For tickets and info go to www.ticketmesandhills.com.

Zip-a-Dee-Doo-Dah

Who doesn’t love a bluebird? David Kilpatrick will answer all your questions about the beloved birds beginning at 10 a.m. on Friday, Jan. 24, at the Ball Visitors’ Center at the Sandhills Horticultural Gardens, 3245 Airport Road, Pinehurst. Then, on Tuesday, Feb. 4, Amanda Bratcher, horticultural agent with the N.C. Cooperative Extension in Lee County, will speak on the subject of decorative ornamental grasses. For additional information or to register for either program go to www.sandhills.edu/horticutural-gardens/upcoming-events.

At the Met

If you can’t get to Cairo this month do the next best thing and attend the Metropolitan Opera’s live streaming presentation of Giuseppe Verdi’s tragic opera in four acts, Aida, at 1 p.m. on Saturday, Jan. 25, at the Sunrise Theater, 250 N.W. Broad St., Southern Pines. For more information go to www.sunrisetheater.com.

One if by Land, Two if by Sea

Join the professional tribute band The British Invaders, dressed in proper black Nehru suits and playing vintage instruments, as they recreate the excitement that swept across America from the other side of the pond in the 1960s. The performance begins at 8 p.m. on Saturday, Jan. 25, at BPAC’s Owens Auditorium, 3395 Airport Road, Pinehurst. For more information got to www.ticketmesandhills.com.

Ruth Pauley Lecture Series

Dr. Katy O’Brien, a past chair of the Brain Injury Association of Georgia, a member of the Academy of Neurological Communication Disorders and Sciences, and a 1994 graduate of Pinecrest High School, will discuss “The Thinking and Talking Brain: Communication, Connection, and Mental Health after Brain Injury and Concussion” on Tuesday, Jan. 21, in BPAC’s Owens Auditorium, 3395 Airport Road, Pinehurst. For more information and tickets go to www.ticketmesandhills.com.

Do You Know That in D Major?

Showbiz superstars hit the stage and things get lively with a few special guests in Jim Caruso’s “Cast Party” with Billy Stritch on the piano at BPAC’s Owens Auditorium, 3395 Airport Road, Pinehurst, on Friday, Jan. 31, at 7 p.m. Every Monday night since 2003, Cast Party’s open mic night and variety show has brought Broadway glitz and wit to the legendary Birdland in New York City. Caruso and Stritch have taken the show on the road, celebrating talent in London, Los Angeles, Las Vegas, San Francisco, Chicago, Austin, St. Louis, Minneapolis, Dallas, Cleveland, Pittsburgh, the Hamptons, Provincetown, Miami, Orlando, Delray Beach and now Pinehurst. For more information go to www.ticketmesandhills.com.

A Good Man

The Sandhills Community College Department of Theater will perform the 1957 off-Broadway production of You’re a Good Man, Charlie Brown based on Charles Schulz’s comic strip Peanuts that first appeared 75 years ago in 1950. Opening night is Friday, Feb. 7, at 7 p.m. in BPAC’s Owens Auditorium, 3395 Airport Road, Pinehurst. There are additional performances on Feb. 8 at 2 p.m. and 7 p.m. and on Feb. 9 at 2 p.m. For information and tickets go to www.ticketmesandhillscom.

Simple Life

SIMPLE LIFE

The Island Baby

A tale of the most perfect storm

By Jim Dodson

January is a special month in our family. That’s because three members of our scattered tribe are January babies. It could have been four if I hadn’t missed my due date by two days and wound up being a February groundhog.

My late father’s birthday is the 18th and my mother’s the 24th. But our oldest child’s birthday on the 28th holds the true winter magic.

Back in September 1990, as we lay in bed looking up at the stars through the skylight on our first night in the house on Bailey Island, my first wife, Alison, said quietly, “Let me have your hand.”

She placed it on her belly, and, sure enough, for the first time ever, I felt something flutter, soft as a hummingbird.

“That’s him,” I whispered in awe.

“Or her,” she said.

Friends were concerned when we told them we planned to move to an island off the Maine coast for the winter while beginning construction of our house on the mainland.

In good weather, they pointed out, the hospital was a good 45-minute drive away — across two adjoining islands, over three narrow bridges and through three tiny villages. In bad winter weather, the trip had been known to take hours.

From Labor Day to June, only about 300 souls inhabited the durable rock island where we set up housekeeping in a fine cottage, which provided us with a 20-mile view of the coast. Within days of our arrival — news spreads fast on a small island — we’d met the folks who ran the community store, the postmistress, several lobstermen and a chatty gentleman named Bob, sort of the island’s de facto mayor and charge d’affaires of information and snowplowing.

“When the snow flies, the drifts can get pretty wicked out here,” he explained, and turned pale when we mentioned we were in the family way — due in early February. “I’m awfully glad you told me,” he said seriously. “We’ll keep an eye on you.”

A few days later, a lady at the store slipped me a scrap of paper with a phone number and said, “I heard about your situation. Call anytime if you need to — Herman’s got four-wheel drive.” Not long after that, one of the local lobsterman pulled me aside and said, “I’ve got a boat that’ll chew through anything. Just give a holler.”

Such nice folks, those island souls.

While we settled in to wait for the baby, they prepared for winter snow, fixing drafts, hooking up plows, topping up the woodpile and getting buckets of sand ready. I realized how much the mariners loved the drama of winter storms. Hard weather makes good timber, as they say in the north country.

There was a dusting of snow two days before Christmas, followed by wind, arctic cold and nothing more. While the islanders scanned the skies for telltale flakes, we scanned a baby book for boy names. Everyone — I mean everyone — was certain we were going to have a boy, including yours truly.

“How about Herman,” I suggested.

Alison laughed. “You mean after the four-wheel guy?”

“More as in Melville, the great white-whale guy.”

Given our location, I suggested other strong nautical names, including Noah, Davy Jones, Billy Budd and Horatio Hornblower — “Hank” for short.

Alison merely smiled and shook her head. Other family members chipped in several male family names.

As the winter deepened and the delivery day approached, only my wife and my dad believed the baby would be a girl.

In the meantime, the islanders grew visibly tense from the absence of snow. Snowplows sat idle; the boys around the stove grumbled over their morning coffee at the community store.

It turned out, in fact, to be the unsnowiest winter on the island in a century. Just our luck. Poor islanders. By early January you could feel their desperation to push snow and fling sand. A few days before the month’s end, Alison joked that our baby would arrive with a snowstorm.

Her mouth to God’s ear.

That Friday night, as we were dining at our favorite restaurant in town, it began to snow like mad. Mainers live for the winter’s first good snow. You could see the relief in their faces. “Better late than never,” our waitress cheerfully declared as she delivered dessert. “Hate to waste my new snow tires!”

Moments later, Alison’s water broke. We left our dessert behind and went straight to the hospital down the block.

The delivery doctor said we still had several hours to go. So, as mother and baby settled in, I drove out to the island to get some clothes and feed the dog. By the time I got there, a blizzard was in full force and even my four-wheel Blazer had difficulty navigating our unplowed lane.

It took another two hours to get off the island, over the bridges and back to the hospital. By the time I climbed the final hill into town, the snow had stopped and a brilliant sunrise bathed a silent white world in golden light. It was a sight I’ll never forget.

I got to my wife’s side 10 minutes before the baby arrived.

The next afternoon, we brought our newborn home, bundled up like an Eskimo baby. The snow was so deep, we had to park at the community store and slide down the hill on our rumps to our cottage doorstep.

Stamping around, folks on the island were downright giddy. Bob was deeply relieved. Snowplows roared and news of the birth quickly spread.

Everyone who peeked at our new arrival wanted to know what we named our sweet island lad.

“Margaret Sinclair,” I proudly told them.“Maggie for short — after both of her grandmothers.”

Chelsey Bennett + Austin Ballard

Chelsey Bennett + Austin Ballard

Chelsey Bennett and Austin Ballard met on a blind date set up by her cousin at a Fayetteville coffee shop in October 2020. The pair hit it off and got engaged a few years later at the Kindred Spirit Mailbox, something of a local landmark on Bird Island, North Carolina.

From there, the wedding planning got underway. Whenever the couple became overwhelmed with the process, they’d use a code word to signal they were done with wedding talk, a tip they said helped keep planning fun all the way to their special day, Nov. 2, 2024.

Chelsey and Austin hosted their entire wedding weekend at Village Pine Venue, in Carthage. Friday featured a rehearsal dinner catered by Elliotts on Linden, Saturday brought the couple’s “I dos” in the courtyard, followed by a garden-themed reception in the main hall, and Sunday saw guests off with a farewell brunch. After the last table had been cleared, the newlyweds donated their centerpieces to FirstHealth Hospice House.

“It was a good feeling to spread the beauty of our flowers to families who needed it most,” says Chelsey.

photographer: Jennifer B. Photography
wedding planner: White Tie Planner, Coralie Von
ceremony & reception: Village Pine Venue
dress: Bride of the Pines
shoes: Bella Belle
hair: The Polished Bride
makeup: Zenia Beauty
bridesmaid: Savvi Formalwear and Bridal
groom & groomsmen: The Gentleman’s Corner

flowers: Hollyfield Design Inc.
cake: The Bakehouse
catering: Capital City Chefs
rentals: Curated Events
transportation: A Ride Transportation

Sarah Rogers + Lance Wonder

Sarah Rogers + Lance Wonder

Sarah Rogers and Lance Wonder hail from opposite sides of the country: The bride is from Ohio, and the groom, Washington. Lucky for the pair, they both happened to be living in North Carolina when they met, in 2018.

Fast forward five years, and the couple eloped at Reservoir Park, in Southern Pines, with only their parents, siblings and Lance’s son Maxwell in attendance. Almost a year to the day later, on Oct. 12, 2024, Sarah and Lance celebrated their union in front of a much larger audience at the Fair Barn, in Pinehurst.

The special day was a boho-glam blowout decorated in gold and neutrals, with seasonal touches completing the event. Out-of-town guests enjoyed fall flavors in their goodie bags, which included pumpkin dark chocolate chip scones from local hotspot Pine Scone Café.

“Just about everything on our wedding day was perfect,” Sarah says. “That is, minus a table catching fire during cocktail hour.”

Fortunately, the newlyweds had a team that expertly handled what could have been a crisis.

“Caroline and Allison, our wedding planners from Southern Polished Events, were so great I didn’t even know about the table fire until after our reception ended,” Sarah says.

After the nuptials, which were briefly interrupted by a furry, four-legged wedding crasher, the Varners and their guests moved to Pinehurst’s Fair Barn for a Christmassy celebration.

“Instead of a guest book, we had guests sign ornaments,” Emily says. “We cannot wait to put these on our tree.”

photographer: Monisa J. Photography
videographer: TreeHouse Creative
wedding planner: Southern Polished Events
ceremony & reception: The Fair Barn
dress & veil: Made with Love
shoes: Badgley Mischka
hair & makeup: Chelsea Regan Beauty
bridesmaids: Birdy Grey
flowers: Thistle & Moon
cake: Fancy & Frosted
catering: Elliotts on Linden
beverages: Trailer: Proper Pour Events, Donkey: The Pint Sized Pasture

Meghan Davis + Daniel Munoz

Meghan Davis + Daniel Munoz

Meghan Davis and Daniel Munoz met at the engagement party of their best friends.

“Neither of us are super aggressive in the dating department, but a year later, when we hung out quite a bit at the wedding — it’s all history from there,” Meghan says.

Dan proposed to Meghan in Tufts Park while they walked around Pinehurst admiring Christmas lights.

“Everyone always says Pinehurst village is like a Hallmark movie, and I couldn’t agree more, especially on that evening,” says Meghan.

The next day was Thanksgiving, and the happy couple celebrated their exciting news with family and friends at the annual Blessing of the Hounds, a favorite local event that formally marks the beginning of foxhunting season.

“Dan and I both wanted to be married in a church, and being from Pinehurst, I always dreamed of getting married at the Village Chapel,” Meghan says.

After their traditional nuptials in the historic chapel on Oct. 12, 2024, the couple celebrated with their guests in the Outlook and 2View Ballrooms, overlooking the No. 2 golf course at the Pinehurst Country Club.

“The weather was really showing off that day,” Meghan says, “so it was an absolutely gorgeous backdrop having everyone out on the course.”

photographer: The Joyner Company
wedding coordinators: Madeline Eckert, Pinehurst Resort; Deborah Davis, The Village Chapel
ceremony: The Village Chapel
reception: Pinehurst Country Club
dress: Vow’d Raleigh
shoes: Nina
hair & makeup: Retro Studio Bar
bridesmaids: Reformation and Jenny Yoo
flowers: Jack Hadden Floral & Event Design
cake & catering: Pinehurst Resort
invitations & programs: Thoughtfully Yours
transportation: Kirk Tours & Limousine

Melissa Jimenez + Franck Krynen

Melissa Jimenez + Franck Krynen

Franck Krynen exchanged phone numbers with Melissa Jimenez after striking up a conversation with her at an Anthropologie in Raleigh. Later that day, Franck texted Melissa, asking if she wanted to go to dinner the next night. As it turned out, he had forgotten that he already had dinner plans with his mom. The solution? Melissa and Franck went on their first date with their mothers in tow.

“And the rest is history!” Melissa says.

Franck proposed a year later at the Italian restaurant where the couple had their first official date without their mothers.

“Just as the tiramisu dessert was served, he got on his knee and proposed,” Melissa says. “I said, ‘YES,’ and everyone in the restaurant clapped!”

Fifteen months later, the couple said their “I dos” at Pinehurst No. 9 on Oct. 5, 2024. Franck is an avid golfer, so the venue was perfect for their ceremony and reception.

“My wedding day was perfect, filled with love and family,” Melissa says. “I couldn’t have asked for a better day.”

photographer: Jennifer B. Photography
videographer:
Davis Video Productions
wedding planner: Madeline Eckert, Pinehurst Resort
wedding coordinator: Divine Nine Weddings and Events
ceremony & reception: Pinehurst No. 9 Clubhouse
dress: White of Raleigh Bridal Boutique
shoes: Badgley Mischka
hair: Hair by Tiarra Jae
makeup: Retro Studio Bar
bridesmaids: Birdy Grey
groom & groomsmen: Men’s Warehouse
flowers: Jack Hadden Floral & Event Design
cake & catering: Pinehurst Resort
transportation: Pinehurst Resort Trolley

Alyssa Veit + Steven Guy

Alyssa Veit + Steven Guy

Pinehurst native Alyssa Veit and her groom, Steven Guy, met in a classic way — through mutual friends while they were students at the University of South Carolina.

“We have been together ever since!” Alyssa says.

When Steven was ready to pop the question, Alyssa’s mom helped set up the ruse with a very “mom” request. She asked to take family pictures during a vacation to Hilton Head Island, South Carolina. When Alyssa walked down to the beach for what she thought were “silly family photos,” Steven was waiting to propose.

Fast forward a year and a half to Sept. 21, 2024. The college sweethearts exchanged “I dos” at the Weymouth Center, where they spent most of their wedding day outside on the grounds. Together with their guests, the newlyweds danced late into the beautiful summer night.

“The day was everything we could have dreamed of and more,” Alyssa says. “All the small details that you worry about for the months leading up to the wedding do not matter at all, and it takes being surrounded by your closest friends and family, who are all there to celebrate you, to realize nothing else matters.”

photographer: Jennifer B. Photography
wedding coordinator: Pamela Butterworth, Hollyfield Design Inc.
ceremony & reception: Weymouth Center for the Arts & Humanities
dress: Milla Nova
shoes: Kate Spade
hair & makeup: Chelsea Regan Beauty
bridesmaids: Billy J
groom & groomsmen: Generation Tux
flowers: Hollyfield Design Inc.
cake: C.Cups Cupcakery
catering: Dinner: Two Brothers Catering; Desserts: Elliotts on Linden
rentals: Tables & chairs: Ward Productions; Tent: Richmond Rentals; Bars: BYOBars of Pinehurst
transportation: A Ride Transportation

Laura Faenza + William Oliver

Laura Faenza + William Oliver

Laura Faenza and William Oliver met through mutual friends, quickly started dating, and two and a half years later, purchased a home together in the Buckhead district of Atlanta, Georgia.

“Little did I know, just a few months after purchasing our first home together, Will had planned to propose in our living room on a Saturday morning in the summer,” Laura says. The bride suspected a proposal was coming but hadn’t expected it to happen at home. “He really did pull off the ultimate surprise,” she says.

Although the couple lives in Atlanta, the bride spent part of her childhood in Pinehurst, where she made many friends and lifelong memories, which now include her wedding day.

With arrangements of white peonies, roses and hydrangeas cascading from the chandeliers, Laura and Will celebrated their new marriage while overlooking the famous No. 2 golf course at the Pinehurst Country Club on May 4, 2024, just a few weeks before the U.S. Open Golf Championship.

“It was almost a homecoming of sorts to one of the places that helped mold me into who I am today,” Laura says. “Will had no arguments on the venue location either, of course, due to his love for golf.”

photographer: Sayer Photography
wedding planner: Pamela Butterworth, Hollyfield Design Inc.
wedding coordinator: Madeline Eckert, Pinehurst Resort
ceremony & reception: 2View Ballroom & Outlook Ballroom, Pinehurst Country Club
dress: Sarah Seven
shoes: Alexandre Birman
hair: Heather Velazco
makeup: Heather Velazco & Ariana Cooper
groomsmen: The Black Tux
flowers: Hollyfield Design Inc.
cake & catering: Pinehurst Resort
invitations & programs: Tiger Lily Invitations