In Dying to Decorate, book one in Cyndy Salzmann's Friday Afternoon Club series, one of the group, Liz, unexpectedly inherits a house. The ladies of the club are worried about depressed Liz, mourning the death of her husband and mother. To help her get through the tough time, they volunteer to spend a weekend repainting and wallpapering the house to get it ready to sell. Then they hear rumors about a ghost.
Salzmann turns her humorous eye on cleaning and painting, celebrates the gifts of womanhood as Liz and her friends encourage Lucy, and tackles a mystery. Soon the Friday Afternoon Club ladies realize solving the mystery may reveal things in Lucy's family tree that may make her feel even worse.
The hilarity of the book comes mainly from Liz, the narrator. Liz writes a Martha Stewart-ish newspaper column about gracious living, while her own home is in chaos.
The friends are great characters, Liz, the out of whack advice columnist, Lucy, depressed and lonely, Marina, the take charge policewoman, the quietly perfect Mary Alice, and others. They all bring their strengths to the group, taking turns supporting each other through the trials and joys of motherhood.
Cyndy Salzmann's book is part of a new style of Christian literature called Mom Lit. Mom Lit had been described as Chick Lit with Children. It's a lighthearted style of writing about children and the struggle to handle the joys and problems that go with raising them. The series, The Yada Yada Prayer Group by Neta Jackson may be the best known Mom Lit series. Lori Copeland, long a successful writer of funny historical romances, is calling Stranded in Paradise, her next release, Mom Lit.
Dying to Decorate, is a great example of this sub-genre of Christian fiction. Salzmann is an author and a speaker. She travels all over the country sharing home management tips in her hilarious style.
Reprinted from the Sioux City Journal, Sioux City, Iowa