Lucille Bowling Carloftis, is without doubt, a wonderful storyteller who has the ability to turn the mundane into the extraordinary. Her choice of descriptors for her characters afford them
human, unforgettable personal qualities. These characters could be met on the streets of a city or on country roads. The settings are absolutely poetry in prose. She is able to transport the
reader from the cobblestone streets of St. Augustine, Florida, to the banks of the Rockcastle River in rural Kentucky in the flash of an eye and never "skip a beat." This book reveals the most
meaningful experiences of her life, and the richness she has derived from them by being a fellow traveler. Lucille and A Beautiful Journey are inexorably bound together. Lucille "waltzed" into
my life more than six decades ago, and little did 1 know then that she would become my life-long friend. She was the new girl in Manchester Elementary School, and everyone noticed her as she
quickly joined them jumping the rope at recess. She was wearing a striking coral and white playsuit, designed and made by her mother and grandmother who were truly artists in their own
professions. Her bouncing black pearls and hazel eyes were strikingly beautiful, but those eyes could not disguise the slight mischief shown in her every movement. Her whole demeanor seemed to
say, "1 know things. Come with me, and 1 will share them with you." Strangely enough, she was immediately accepted by everyone, and never regarded with the suspicions that often accompany the
unfamiliar newcomer to the mountains of southeastern Kentucky. We simply wanted to know her better. Many years have passed since Lucille's first day of school in Manchester Elementary, and she
has experienced her fair share of joys and sorrows. Whether ecstatic with happiness or devastated with sorrow, she has quickly rebounded with her never-failing tranquility because she is a
survivor. As the visitor enters her shop, or her home, he or she is greeted with the warmest of smiles and given the feeling of being special. These visitors return again and again, year after
year. The reader of A Beautiful Journey will become the visitors due to memorable characters, and scenes depicted on every page. As an old admirer of hers once remarked, "You, sir, are in the
presence of a lady-a very gracious lady." You, the reader, will certainly know this. Jean Baker Cobb