
Room to Read
Oct 01, 2008
By: Haskell Harris
Writer Julia Reed's library is proof that good things come to those who wait
How to Name a Dog
Oct 01, 2008
By: Daniel Wallace
One man's lifelong quest to get it right
Low Impact, High Fun
Oct 01, 2008
By: T. Edward Nickens
An eco-resort in the Caribbean proves that the good life can also be easy on the environment
The Original Hideout
Oct 01, 2008
By: Winston Groom
Why Southerners keep flocking to North Carolina’s High Hampton Inn
Hot Springs, Arkansas
Oct 01, 2008
By: Allston McCrady
From hot mineral baths to a renowned film festival, America’s “first resort” is steaming
Chop Shop
Oct 01, 2008
By: Roy Blount, Jr.
What’s better than a fire on a cold November day? Splitting firewood, of course
The Wine Life
Sep 30, 2008
By: Haskell Harris
Atlanta urbanites aspire to re-create Italian wine country in the hills of North Georgia
Keepers of the Land
Sep 30, 2008
By: Clyde Edgerton
Farmers – and their dirt, dogs, boots, and jeans – shine from the pages of a new book
Out of Shape
Sep 30, 2008
By: Susan Soper
A sculptor turns the ordinary into art
The Michelada
Sep 30, 2008
By: Francine Maroukian
Getting to the bottom of a mysterious Texas concoction
Sounds like Trouble
Sep 30, 2008
By: Matt Hendrickson
Hayes Carll finds inspiration in the South's dark corners
The Kindest Cut
Sep 30, 2008
By: David Mezz
Use a sharpening stone to give your old blade new bite
Water Born
Sep 30, 2008
By: Sandy Lang
Smack in the middle of Florida river country, Aaron Wells crafts some of the country’s finest wooden kayaks and canoes
Bloody Good
Aug 12, 2008
By: Donald Link, as told to Francine Maroukian
New Orleans chef Donald Link shares his Bloody Mary secrets
Okra
Aug 12, 2008
By: Allston McCrady
The South's signature vegetable is ready for harvest
Net Results
Aug 12, 2008
By: David DiBenedetto
If you can't throw a cast net, now's the time to learn
Lazy on the Lumber
Aug 12, 2008
By: Mark Anders
Exploring the Amazon of the South by paddle
Lonesome Doves
Aug 12, 2008
By: Ray Sasser
The San Miguel Ranch & Lodge in southern Texas is a hunter's paradise
A Hotel with Heart
Aug 12, 2008
By: Howell Raines
The feline charm of New Orleans' Soniat House
For the Birds
Aug 08, 2008
By: Paige L. Hill
An avian center with a noble mission opens in South Carolina
Books - Southern Drama
Aug 08, 2008
By: Karen Olsson
Finally, a history of Savannah as rich as the city itself
Pass the Pawpaws
Aug 08, 2008
By: Kent Priestley
West Virginia plan breeder Neal Peterson champions a less-known native fruit
A Good Nose
Aug 08, 2008
By: Roger Pinckney
How a Newfie taught me a few things about women
Home Base
Aug 08, 2008
By: David Mezz
Designer Billy Reid's den comfortably mixes the old and the new
Against the Grain
Aug 08, 2008
By: Roy Blount, Jr.
What happened to the halcyon days of corn?
Taking Flight
Jun 19, 2008
By: Elizabeth Dewberry
After Katrina, a New Orleans artist strives to connect art and the environment
Forever Pine
Jun 19, 2008
By: Sandy Lang
A Louisiana company salvages precious wood and gives it new life
The String King
Jun 19, 2008
By: Matt Hendrickson
T Bone Burnett on growing up in Fort Worth, playing with Bob Dylan, and why Andy Warhol matters to music
Bug Off
Jun 18, 2008
By: Roy Blount Jr.
You have to be tricky to get even with pesky flies
Guitar God
Jun 13, 2008
By: Donovan Webster
In the hills of southwest Virginia, Wayne Henderson makes music by hand
Horse Sense
Jun 13, 2008
By: Damon Lee Fowler
An Atlanta architect sets a new standard for equestrian centers
Church in the Woods
Jun 13, 2008
By: Roger Pinckney
At the ruins of an old church, a family honors a tradition begun generations before
Compost Happens
Apr 22, 2008
By: Roy Blount Jr.
How to make a dirt pile worth believing in
Lapdog
Apr 22, 2008
By: Charles Gaines
How I was trained by my Yorkie
Minton Sparks Catches Fire
Apr 22, 2008
By: Marshall Chapman
The love child of Flannery O'Connor and Hank Williams lights up the stage
The Flower Doctor
Apr 22, 2008
By: Rosa Shand
A South Carolina neurologist cultivates his legacy through a stunning rare Southern plant
Blade Maker
Apr 22, 2008
By: Monte Burke
Jerry Fisk can turn just about any hunk of metal into a very sharp work of art
The Call Master
Feb 21, 2008
By: Bryan Keith Hunter
A North Carolina woodworker crafts one-of-a-kind birdcalls
Garden Retreat
Feb 14, 2008
By: Allston McCrady
A South Carolina designer reinterprets a classic garden structure
Southern Crew
Feb 14, 2008
By: Elizabeth Connor
Rowing in Tennessee’s Secret City Head Race
Blues Train
Jan 07, 2008
By: Ravi Howard
An afternoon with cultural critic Albert Murray
Tower Power
Jan 07, 2008
By: Steve Eubanks
Architect Keith Summerour takes his vision of vertical living to rural Georgia
Ode to Bourbon
Nov 07, 2007
By: Roy Blount, Jr.
Sweet Reflection on a Sour Mash
Inside Crazy Sista's Kitchen
Nov 07, 2007
By: J. Wes Yoder
Spinning plates and swapping stories at LuLu’s in Alabama with chef and owner Lucy Buffett
Life After Politics
Nov 07, 2007
By: Alex Sanders
After losing a senatorial election, the writer finds redemption in monks and fruitcakes
Emerald Greens
Nov 06, 2007
By: Steve Eubanks
Two Southern cousins dream up Doonbeg Golf Club in Ireland
Mumsy's Big Move
Nov 06, 2007
By: Charlie Geer
A Southern grandmother heads west to forget
Shifting Tides
Sep 24, 2007
By: John Barry
Relying on the Mississippi to rebuild New Orleans
Mating Game
Sep 24, 2007
By: Barbara Ensrud
Pairing bird and bottle to perfection
Bermuda White
Jun 26, 2007
By: Ben Brown
Storm-Worthy New Urbanism on the Beach
Jubilee
Jun 26, 2007
By: Jimbo Meador
Gigging Fish by Tide and Moon
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A Hotel with Heart
By: Howell Raines
August 12, 2008

Grand Entrance: Once of the Soniat House hotel's many beautiful views.
credit: Photo courtesy of Soniat House
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When the French Opera House on Bourbon Street burned to ashes in 1919, the Times-Picayune lamented that “the heart of the old French Quarter has stopped beating.” Almost a century later, Hurricane Katrina tried to accomplish what flames could not. But I knew the heart of America’s most distinctive city was still beating when I learned that both the Soniat House hotel and its dowager feline, Clarisse, had ridden out the storm.
As for how stoutly New Orleans hearts can beat, consider this tale. The Soniat’s resident owners, Frances and Rodney Smith, were in Paris when Katrina hit. The dainty, albeit imperious, Clarisse weathered the storm alone in her favorite second-floor suite, No. 25. With the paralyzed city still in full lockdown, the Smiths’ two grown sons, packing guns and wearing body armor, talked their way past National Guard roadblocks and rescued Clarisse, whose friskiness belies her sixteen years. “She’d just got back from her annual physical. It cost nine hundred dollars. Rodney almost had a fit,” says Frances. Clarisse’s favorite human, longtime desk clerk Richard Thompson, talked him down about the vet’s bill.
“Richard said, ‘Rodney, she’s our number-one selling tool.’”
Even Clarisse’s fans know that a cat alone did not get the Soniat on just about every “best hotels” list you can name. It occupies three classic creole townhouses built by the wealthy planter Joseph Soniat DuFossat and his son Edward in the early 1830s. In 1983, the Smiths began gently configuring them into a thirty-three-room boutique hotel. Its antiques, vintage carpets, and bayou-flavored paintings, the winding staircases and dripping fountains and fronded gardens—all hiding behind heavy green doors that must be opened from within—capture perfectly the down-at-the-heels glamour of the city of dreamy dreams. The place drives travel writers mad with superlative love. For example, here’s a reporter for Gourmet on a first glimpse behind the green doors: “Gently the door swings open. Two courtly porters lead us into a stone carriageway by the light of a million flickering candles. It is the most exquisite entrance on earth.”
Devotees of the Amalfi Coast and, for that matter, Charleston, South Carolina, might want to challenge that claim, but you get the idea. I love that carriageway, too, in part because it often provides a first glimpse of Clarisse, curled in her favorite chair in the adjoining honor bar or walking across the check-in desk. To be visited in one’s room by Clarisse is a great compliment. She may stay for ten minutes or eight hours. A true Crescent City courtesan, she can be wooed, but never detained.
Next to the beauty of the place and the graciously unobtrusive staff, my wife, Krystyna, and I like the biscuits, which are made and baked on the premises. They arrive each morning in a basket, wrapped in linen napkins atop a heated brick. There’s only strawberry jam, imported from Rodney’s hometown, Ponchatoula, known as the Strawberry Capital of the World. If there’s a bad room at the Soniat, I haven’t had it yet, and I generally take potluck. For breakfast on the second day, we usually stroll past General Beauregard’s garden and over to Jackson Square for beignets at Café du Monde. Then it’s back to the biscuits on the third morning or maybe brunch at Arnaud’s if it’s a Sunday. The Soniat encourages that kind of schedule, a slow echo of the beating of New Orleans’ own heart—a rhythm indomitable and immemorial, as the former French Quarter character William Faulkner might have put it.
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