Posted on 06/02/2008 7:02:43 PM PDT by BOBWADE
and a minor film trivia note, in The Firm (Grisham), Tom Cruise is give a welcome party to his new Memphis law firm on the roof of The Peabody.
>>>>>The Pea-buddy Hotel. Not Peabody the Pea-Buddy.
Funny they told me the exact opposite when I was there:
Pea-Body, not Pea-Buddy.
Yeah Corky’s is a franchise chain. That’s like going to McDonald’s. Better to find a real restaurant.
>>>>>Ick! Not much one for biscuits and gravy. Just give me the southern BBQ!!! lol
Well, they had a shortage of photos so I showed what was there (I’m not a biscuits and gravy man myself),
better to go check the site itself, www.roadfood.com
I was born and raised in Memphis. Some tips on BBQ: Corky’s is the same stuff you can get anywhere. The Rendezvous is great is you like dry rub. But the best place, is Interstate BBQ. You have to be a little brave to enjoy this place because it’s not in the safest part of town. It’s best to bring a native who’s not scared. But it’s worth it. Also, get up one morning and eat at the Arcade Diner (Memphis’s oldest) downtown, hop the trolley, and visit the Civil Rights Museum. It’s truly a moving experience.
Civil rights museum, Mud Island, Pink Palace, Beale Street. I took my kids there last year and we had a very enjoyable and educational visit.
I agree on Shiloh... A lot of history.
I'd recommend The civil rights museum, Graceland, the Memphis Zoo (polar bears are so cool!), Gibson Guitar museum, Sun Studios, Tunica (ok...so that's in MS! LOL)
Above all...be careful. We have lots of killin' and shootin' and carjackin' and robbin'...
The Firm! I said The Client. But you are correct. Eh...John Grisham...read one book, you’ve read ‘em all.
forget Corky’s
Neely’s is where you wanna go for ribs or anything else Bar-B-Que’d in Memphis(best I’ve ever had!):
http://www.neelysbbq.com/home.htm
been there 40 years-they must know something about it
they have relatives in Nashville that also do Bar-B-Que
and it’s evey bit as good
There just isn't a lot for kids. Zoo, St. Louis has a much better one. Beal St. is for grown ups.
Fuel is about 3.65 on the average.
Wherever you go in Memphis, just be sure to keep your car locked, and your eyes open.
From Memphis, Henning is North. It’s also the home of Alex Haily, who wrote Roots. A lot of the story was about Henning.
Yeah, The Firm.
You want to have a few minutes of fun some time, grab any of his first 5 or 10 novels and look at the sentence structure:
“It was a grim day. The clouds were mounting. The air was chilling. He walked on the sidewalk alone. He passed a tennis court. It was empty. The green asphalt looked almost like grass. But it wasn’t.”
“He reached into his pocket. A piece of scrap paper was there. He took it out and read it. ‘Always write short sentences and short chapters. Your books will sell better at airports.’”
What could that mean? He was a lawyer, not a writer.
He kept walking.
John Grisham is a RICH ex lawyer, ex Baptist Deacon, turned “writer”.
>>>I prefer Corky’s or Interstate BBQ.
OK, I’ve said my piece about Corky’s, and other folks here and in other forums (foodie forums mostly) have given Rendevous a bad rap, that leaves Interstate, which I was trying to remember last night. It’s outside the city but I’ve read good things about it, and founder/owner still works the floor from what I’ve heard. Some people swear by it (not sure if they mean the original place or one his newer spots around the city). Anyway I’d definitely give Interstate a try.
I convinced my company to sponsor a BBQ team for Memphis In May some years back, after I met them while judging the Georgia State BBQ Cookoff (”Big Pig Jig”). So I may be a bit pickier than others.
>>>>John Grisham is a RICH ex lawyer, ex Baptist Deacon, turned writer.
Oh yeah, he is that, and from what I’ve read he’s one of the very few novelists/script writers who gets complete oversight of the way in which his novels are filmed.
But what I meant to illustrate is that in all of his earlier novels he uses the most elementary sentence, paragraph, and chapter construction that’s possible. His plots are great, but I think it’s the utter simplicity of his writing that’s made him such a great success. Easy-to-read airport novels can be big sellers (and there’s nothing wrong with that).
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