Dori Sanders
Dorinda 'Dori' Sanders (born 1934,[1] York County, South Carolina) is an African-American novelist, food writer and farmer.[2] Her first novel, Clover (1990), was a bestseller, and won a 1990 Lillian Smith Book Award. She has also written a cookbook, Dori Sanders' Country Cooking, that mixes recipes and anecdotes.
The eighth of 10 children, Sanders is a fourth-generation farmer. She cultivates peaches and vegetables with her brother, on Sanders Peach Farm and Roadside Market, located in Filbert, South Carolina.[3][4] In the video created to celebrate her 2011 Craig Claiborne Lifetime Achievement Award from the Southern Foodways Alliance, Sanders tells how her father, a rural school teacher, purchased the land in approximately 1915 and began successfully cultivating peaches in the early 1920s.[5]
Works[]
- Clover: A Novel, 1990
- Her Own Place: A Novel, 1993
- Dori Sanders' country cooking: recipes and stories from the family farm stand, 1995
References[]
- ^ "Dori Sanders". Oxford Reference. Retrieved December 14, 2020.
- ^ Golden, Susan L. (2006). "Sanders, Dori (1935?- )". In Elizabeth Ann Beaulieu (ed.). Writing African American Women: An Encyclopedia of Literature by and about Women of Color. Westport, Connecticut: Greenwood Press. pp. 768–9. ISBN 0-313-33197-9.
- ^ "Sanders Peach Farm & Roadside Market". discoversouthcarolina.com. Retrieved April 17, 2016.
- ^ "South Carolina's favorite fruit arrives early, stays late through summer". Post and Courier. Retrieved April 17, 2016.
- ^ "Meet Dori Sanders". Southern Foodways Alliance. Retrieved April 17, 2016.
External links[]
- Works by or about Dori Sanders in libraries (WorldCat catalog)
- Sanders' website
- 1934 births
- Living people
- 20th-century American novelists
- African-American novelists
- American women novelists
- Novelists from South Carolina
- 20th-century American women writers
- African-American women writers
- American novelist, 1930s birth stubs